Laura-CCC4
Senior Guinea Pig
...don't always mean there has to be a blatantly obvious external fungal problem.
Recent medical history coming up now that my two boys, Elijah & Errol, have been diagnosed with systemic mycosis. Hoping it might help others who might ever come across some of these symptoms.
Elijah pig became very withdrawn and reluctant to eat about 2 months ago. A faint and occasional click in one lung could be heard. A dental exam showed no dental issues so on discussing things with a rodentologist friend, we considered oral fungal infection. Started him on Daktarin Oral Gel and Nurofen, instant improvement, I naively stopped the treatment after one week as he was fully recovered.
Wrong thing to do, it came back with a vengeance (main symptom: heavy dribbling of stale-smelling saliva) two weeks later and he's not long been off the full course of Daktarin and Nurofen.
He had been doing fine since, but over the last few days this faint click in the lung has returned and he seems a little quiet in his behaviour again.
I now move onto Errol, Elijah's brother who lives with him. Both brothers are fond of eating each others hair - saves me trimming their hair but I'd really much rather they didn't go to such efforts. Errol is the pig with lens luxation (slipped lens) and who has lately developed a strange "drifting" movement: whenever he stands still, his head drifts towards the left. Not imbalance, but rather like we drift when we feel dizzy. Again, rodentologist friend and I suspected neurological.
Errol has also had a scab on his back foot for the past month that is not healing, and for the past few days he has been very quiet and much unlike his normal self. Upon bathing him yesterday I noticed he had developed flaky/crusty skin on his toes and along his leg.
Both boys have now had an anti-fungal bath and will be bathed again next week and the week after.
To summarise, the boys combined symptoms have included:
- Withdrawn, quiet behaviour;
- Reluctance to eat;
- Dribbling (dro-oling);
- Stale-smelling saliva;
- "Drifting" movement of the head;
- Faint and occasional click in one lung;
- Scab on foot pad that won't heal (not bumblefoot, but bumblefoot can be a problem with fungal infections);
- Flaky skin on feet.
The barbering (eating each others hair) is a major contributor to the continued problem with this; clearly the fungal spores have been on the boys hair, and the more of each others hair they have eaten, the more fungal spores they have ingested. It just surprised me that there were barely any symptoms externally, given how long Elijah pig has had issues.
Errol's drifting problem is likely to be a result of ingesting the fungal spores; the fungal problem infects them systemically which includes the central nervous system, hence Errol's symptoms. It can't be undone but treatment will stop it getting worse.
All this overwhelmingly points to systemic fungal infection, I have had a discussions with rodentologist friend and Vedra and I have quarantined the boys downstairs, away from my other pigs and away from any inpatients. They will stay in quarantine for around 4 weeks.
I am starting them on Itrafungol today and am hoping that it does the trick!
Recent medical history coming up now that my two boys, Elijah & Errol, have been diagnosed with systemic mycosis. Hoping it might help others who might ever come across some of these symptoms.
Elijah pig became very withdrawn and reluctant to eat about 2 months ago. A faint and occasional click in one lung could be heard. A dental exam showed no dental issues so on discussing things with a rodentologist friend, we considered oral fungal infection. Started him on Daktarin Oral Gel and Nurofen, instant improvement, I naively stopped the treatment after one week as he was fully recovered.
Wrong thing to do, it came back with a vengeance (main symptom: heavy dribbling of stale-smelling saliva) two weeks later and he's not long been off the full course of Daktarin and Nurofen.
He had been doing fine since, but over the last few days this faint click in the lung has returned and he seems a little quiet in his behaviour again.
I now move onto Errol, Elijah's brother who lives with him. Both brothers are fond of eating each others hair - saves me trimming their hair but I'd really much rather they didn't go to such efforts. Errol is the pig with lens luxation (slipped lens) and who has lately developed a strange "drifting" movement: whenever he stands still, his head drifts towards the left. Not imbalance, but rather like we drift when we feel dizzy. Again, rodentologist friend and I suspected neurological.
Errol has also had a scab on his back foot for the past month that is not healing, and for the past few days he has been very quiet and much unlike his normal self. Upon bathing him yesterday I noticed he had developed flaky/crusty skin on his toes and along his leg.
Both boys have now had an anti-fungal bath and will be bathed again next week and the week after.
To summarise, the boys combined symptoms have included:
- Withdrawn, quiet behaviour;
- Reluctance to eat;
- Dribbling (dro-oling);
- Stale-smelling saliva;
- "Drifting" movement of the head;
- Faint and occasional click in one lung;
- Scab on foot pad that won't heal (not bumblefoot, but bumblefoot can be a problem with fungal infections);
- Flaky skin on feet.
The barbering (eating each others hair) is a major contributor to the continued problem with this; clearly the fungal spores have been on the boys hair, and the more of each others hair they have eaten, the more fungal spores they have ingested. It just surprised me that there were barely any symptoms externally, given how long Elijah pig has had issues.
Errol's drifting problem is likely to be a result of ingesting the fungal spores; the fungal problem infects them systemically which includes the central nervous system, hence Errol's symptoms. It can't be undone but treatment will stop it getting worse.
All this overwhelmingly points to systemic fungal infection, I have had a discussions with rodentologist friend and Vedra and I have quarantined the boys downstairs, away from my other pigs and away from any inpatients. They will stay in quarantine for around 4 weeks.
I am starting them on Itrafungol today and am hoping that it does the trick!