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Mites

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Deleted member 122615

Hey guys, so my little guy has been diagnosed with mites and has been given some ivermectin to combat them. I've washed the fleeces and his bed etc but wanted to find out if there's anything else I should be cleaning or throwing away? Should I bin the open hay and replace? Do I need to clean any carpets or anything? Just want to be sure we do everything that we can to give the best chance of ridding them.
 
Hey guys, so my little guy has been diagnosed with mites and has been given some ivermectin to combat them. I've washed the fleeces and his bed etc but wanted to find out if there's anything else I should be cleaning or throwing away? Should I bin the open hay and replace? Do I need to clean any carpets or anything? Just want to be sure we do everything that we can to give the best chance of ridding them.

Hi and welcome

There are two types of mites; which ones are you dealing with? Hay/fur mites (chirodiscoides caviae) or mange mites (trixacarus caviae)?

Hay mites fix their egg cases to the hairs mainly at the bum end; they are comparatively harmless although a nuisance. They come with hay; these days not so much with cheap untreated farmers hay (which used to be very easy to get on top of) but a more resistent strain turning up in imported shop hay. Getting rid of the infected hay and may be switching the brand should do the trick.

Mange mites burrow theirs into the painfully inflamed skin; because of the immense discomfort this causes, an advanced case can cause fitting and even death. In many cases guinea pigs have mange mite eggs already in their skin. These are generally kept under control by a fully functional immune system. Mange mites can also be found in the environment but don't generally cause any problems.

There is not much else you can do apart from deep cleaning/disinfecting the cage and doing a full course of invermectin. You will notice a decrease of increase of the itching abot 2-3 days after the first application, then an increase again in the days leading up to the second round, but in most cases the itching should stop completely 2-3 days after the second round. The third round is there to catch any stragglers and prevent a return.

Please see your vet again if that is not the case. Because hay mite eggs are not in the skin, they are much less easy to kill. I find it rather more effective to simply cut off any affected bum hairs, especially in long-haired piggies and to simply physically remove the eggs. The hair will grow back, even in short-haired piggies.

Both mites are usually treated with a full 3 rounds course of ivermectin; in advanced cases with more. The interval between the rounds depends on the product used. The higher dosed the product, the greater the interval (1-2 weeks).

Insectical shampoo may only kill living mites (which the ivermectin already does), but it won't penetrate egg cases, so it is not much use in my experience. Especially as you cannot use it before you see your vet (will make a diagnosis and immediate good quality treatment very difficult/impossible) and you cannot use it until at least 48 hours after the application of ivermectin, by which time the ivermectin is kicking in fully anyway.

PS: I find F10 disinfectant concentrate very helpful, as I can simply dunk all their hideys into the solution (follow tips on the product label) and let them dry.
 
I haven’t dealt with mange mites but my two have hay mites. Our vet told us to get rid of all our wooden items in the cage : see my post

Hope this helps!
 
Hi, thanks for the replies. I'm not sure which I'm dealing with, was at the vets on Monday and they took a skin scrape and on closer inspection the vet said he saw mites. The area affected was his top lip which had gone slightly bald and had a patch of redness further away from his mouth. He had .1mg of ivermectin on the back of his neck on Monday evening and I have to apply the other .1mg this Monday. I have recently changed brands of hay. Since Monday he has stopped rubbing his lip on his water bottle so the redness has gone and tbh I don't think he's ever really scratched more in the last week or so than he normally does.
 
Hi, thanks for the replies. I'm not sure which I'm dealing with, was at the vets on Monday and they took a skin scrape and on closer inspection the vet said he saw mites. The area affected was his top lip which had gone slightly bald and had a patch of redness further away from his mouth. He had .1mg of ivermectin on the back of his neck on Monday evening and I have to apply the other .1mg this Monday. I have recently changed brands of hay. Since Monday he has stopped rubbing his lip on his water bottle so the redness has gone and tbh I don't think he's ever really scratched more in the last week or so than he normally does.

Lips/face are generally more associated with a fungal/ringworm infection while mites generally affect the back, so please be careful with that and keep it in mind. Ivermectin can suppress/slow down ringworm, but it doesn't heal it; you need different treatment for that. Please be aware that ringworm is highly infective and transmittable to humans and other pets, too. General vets that are not very experienced with small furries can get the diagnosis wrong, especially in the early stages. Please read our ringworm guide, just in case: Ringworm: Hygiene And Pictures


If you have bought your guinea pigs within the last couple of weeks, you can reclaim any vet cost from the pet shop as exposure and infection must have happened there if you present the vet bill together with your sales receipt.
 
We only have the one little lad, he's 3 years old, I originally (after lots of reading on here) thought it was thrush because his poop has been a little off recently and when I discovered this red patch on his lip that's when I decided to go to the vet. The red patch isn't bloody and he hasn't been clawing at it or scratching it and it didn't bother him when I touched it. My first thoughts when I saw it, was that the probiotic I add to his water might have dried on his skin as his fur was slightly tinged the same shade of green and the roots of his hair had a little bit of green crust on them. I have since changed to adding the probiotic on his food. From the look of the ringworm pics, I don't think it's that although of course, I am keeping a very close eye on him.
 
Is the patch on the lips or next to them? if it is on the lips, then you are more likely dealing with cheilitis (lip infection).
 
It's not on his lip as such, it's about half a centimetre above and the same away from the corner of his mouth, I've had a good look around the area and there's nothing else I can see, no balding, scabbing and he's not scratching or anything anymore than normal, the vet did point out a few dandruffy bits in his fur on his back. He wasn't very clear on his descriptions.
 
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