dongzheng
Junior Guinea Pig
Hello, I'm bothering you again. Yesterday, while browsing the forum, I saw an article about arthritis. The poster mentioned that if anyone noticed their guinea pig showing symptoms similar to arthritis, they could send him an X-ray. However, I don't know how to send it, and now I can't find the article. Could you give me some guidance? I noticed that my hamster walks very slowly after being startled, but when she is very excited, she hops around like a rabbit. I wonder if this is related to being startled. I also looked it up on the forum and saw that this might be because some hamsters lack vitamin C, causing them to hop instead of walk. Calcium deficiency may also affect their mobility. Based on her current condition, these are the only two possibilities I can think of. I really don't want to take her to the hospital again and scare her, so I'm reaching out to you for help. I've already sent you her videos. I noticed that she always bites her own fur. There are four videos in total, two showing her walking and two showing her biting her fur.She needs to be taken back to the vet urgently.
Guinea pigs do not need and should not be given supplementary vitamin c tablets - doing so long term can cause health problems. Piggies get all their vit c needs from a good balanced diet (from their veg and pellets) without the need to be given vit c tablets. There is not one long term owner on this forum that gives any form of supplementation.
If your piggy has been supplemented long term above and beyond her diet (veg and pellets) then their bodies get used to abnormally and unnecessarily high amounts of vitamin c. Unfortunately if long term supplementation then suddenly stops it can cause a risk to health - not because the levels are too low but because their body can’t cope with the sudden drop from the high levels that they have become used to.
Long term supplementation always has to be weaned off slowly.
