Most infected rabbits don't show any signs or symptoms until the rabbit is perhaps older, stressed or immunocompromised.
Not exact matches
It is also a contagious disease that can spread by direct contact with an
infected rabbit, contact with contaminated objects, or a
doe (mother) can pass it on to her kits.
Occasionally, a
rabbit or a dog can become
infected, but if they
do, it's a non-patent infection, meaning that it doesn't reproduce and a
rabbit (or dog) can not shed it.
Since the pinworm is a direct life cycle with NO intermediate host, this means your
rabbit got it from the feces of an
infected rabbit (it didn't just happen to your
rabbit).
Rabbits infected with Pasteurella can — and
do — live safely and happily to old age.