Hi, I have just returned from the vets and have been advised that our piggy has pneumonia. I have only had him a week after adopting him from a local animal shelter and in the last 24 hours noticed that he had started to cough and sneeze. I have had guinea pigs before so knew that something was up. He is still eating some pellets and hay, very much enjoys his greens but isn't drinking much water. Is it a good sign that he is still eating something? The vet has given us some antibiotics which we are to give him twice a day with the syringe. Attempt one did not go so well as he held them in his mouth and spat some back out. Is there a better way to give him his antibiotics or anything else we should be thinking about doing to ensure he recovers as quickly as possible? The vet has asked us to come back in a weeks time and if there is no improvement he will send him for a chest x-ray. Fingers crossed we don't need that . . .
Hi and welcome!
It is a good sign that your piggy is still eating. The need to breathe comes before the need to drink and only thridly the need to eat. Please be aware that antibiotics are appetite dampeners and in some cases even killers, so your little boy is facing a double whammy in the coming days. You can reclaim any vet cost from the shop, as the infection/exposure happened there.
What you can do:
- Here are our tips for medicating. If you have somebody else either hold your boy or stick the syringe in, it will make it easier. Mask the taste of the baytril (which is truly horrible) with the same amount of ribena or fruit juice, or give some ribena immediately afterwards to wash it away.
Administering Medications
- weigh your boy daily at the same time in the feeding cycle instead of the normal weekly and start topping him up with syringe feed as soon as he is losing more than 30-50g from his original weight.
Complete Syringe Feeding Guide
- give a pinch of probiotic 1-2 hours after the antibiotic to help prop up the guts, whether that is on a bit of veg or syringed. Details on supportive home care products at the end of our step-by-step syringe feeding guide.
- place a bowl of steaming water next to the cage and renew to help ease the breathing. You can add a drop of olbas oil if you wish, but please do not use vicks. It contains ingredients that are toxic for guinea pigs.
- It is going to take 2-3 days for the antibiotic to kick in, but contact your vet if symptoms persist after a week. Ask your vet for a diuretic to drain the lungs or some bisolvon powder to help clear the airways from mucus if he continues to struggle to breathe. Guinea pigs can't breathe through the mouth, so any obstruction of the airways is very audible.
- see a vet or out-of-hours vet (contact details for that from your vet's answering machine) asap as an emergency if your boy is suddenly deteriorating, apathetic and off his food. Do not try to syringe feed or water if he is too apathetic or too weak to swallow.
I hope that all goes well and that your boy will recover quickly.