KirstyGP
Junior Guinea Pig
Hi, I’m looking for some advice and reassurance.
On Friday night I weighed my five year old guinea-pig, Butterbean and realised that he had lost quite a bit of weight (around 100g) in a short time.
He has always been quite chubby so it wasn’t obvious from handling him. I took him to our local vets the next morning. The vet examined him but couldn’t find anything wrong. I closely monitored him over the weekend and realised that he was interested in food but was struggling to chew and was spitting hard foods eg carrot out. He also seemed to be favouring one side of his mouth and was drooling a little. We commenced two-hourly Critical Care syringe feeds over the weekend and he gained a little weight. We also have Metacam and he seems happier to eat after each dose. I spoke to the vet again this morning and we decided that his teeth may be causing the issue. It was agreed that he would see him today (monday). We did try to get him in with an exotic specialist about an hour away but they had very little capacity and would only see us if we agreed to a full set of tests to exclude other things, including a CT scan and full biochemistry. This would have been at a cost of around £1500+ and I felt strongly that I didn’t want to put him through lots of invasive investigations as it wouldn’t change the outcome.
Our local vet looked at his teeth under anaesthesia today. His molars were overgrown and one top incisor was broken, leaving a sharp edge. He has filed the teeth down.
Tonight he’s quiet (which they said to expect) but is trying to eat. However he’s really struggling to bite food off. He chews for ages and then just spits the food back out. He’s also not interested in his critical care feed. He’s not eating any hay.
I’m concerned that they’ve filed his incisors too short. How big an issue is this? Do I just keep offering syringe feeds and cut food up and hand-feed?
Is it normal to not have much appetite post op? (We’re only a few hours post op).
Any advice greatly appreciated. Many thanks from a very anxious guinea pig mum x
On Friday night I weighed my five year old guinea-pig, Butterbean and realised that he had lost quite a bit of weight (around 100g) in a short time.
He has always been quite chubby so it wasn’t obvious from handling him. I took him to our local vets the next morning. The vet examined him but couldn’t find anything wrong. I closely monitored him over the weekend and realised that he was interested in food but was struggling to chew and was spitting hard foods eg carrot out. He also seemed to be favouring one side of his mouth and was drooling a little. We commenced two-hourly Critical Care syringe feeds over the weekend and he gained a little weight. We also have Metacam and he seems happier to eat after each dose. I spoke to the vet again this morning and we decided that his teeth may be causing the issue. It was agreed that he would see him today (monday). We did try to get him in with an exotic specialist about an hour away but they had very little capacity and would only see us if we agreed to a full set of tests to exclude other things, including a CT scan and full biochemistry. This would have been at a cost of around £1500+ and I felt strongly that I didn’t want to put him through lots of invasive investigations as it wouldn’t change the outcome.
Our local vet looked at his teeth under anaesthesia today. His molars were overgrown and one top incisor was broken, leaving a sharp edge. He has filed the teeth down.
Tonight he’s quiet (which they said to expect) but is trying to eat. However he’s really struggling to bite food off. He chews for ages and then just spits the food back out. He’s also not interested in his critical care feed. He’s not eating any hay.
I’m concerned that they’ve filed his incisors too short. How big an issue is this? Do I just keep offering syringe feeds and cut food up and hand-feed?
Is it normal to not have much appetite post op? (We’re only a few hours post op).
Any advice greatly appreciated. Many thanks from a very anxious guinea pig mum x