1 Common neurological problems
- Disconcerting normal behaviours
- Neurological and CBS symptoms with more than one cause
- Seizures - symptoms and causes
- E.cuniculi
- Strokes
- CBS Syndrome/Walled-in Otitis Media (link)
2 Home care tips, welfare and end of life considerations
With great thanks to @PigglePuggle, who has researched and written this guide for The Guinea Pig Forum.
In this guide we will consider some other things which may initially present with similar symptoms to suspected CBS or that cause (or could be mistaken) for neurological symptoms.
These include:
- Disconcerting normal behaviours which an inexperienced owner may mistake for neurological problems
- Common CBS symptoms that can have different causes
- Neurological disorders: Seizures, E. cuniculi infection and Stroke
Disconcerting normal behaviours
It is quite common for a new and loving guinea pig owner to be very worried about which behaviours of guinea pigs are normal, and which are not. Two common aspects of normal guinea pig behaviour which are often mistaken for neurological problems are “popcorning”, and also sleeping.
Popcorning
Popcorning is a common and positive behaviour seen in happy and lively guinea pigs during play and social interactions, especially in youngsters or in males socialising with, or getting a pheromone sniff of, females. Popcorning is literally a guinea pig jumping of for joy, often they suddenly leap in the air and twitch their back legs, sometimes making a high pitched vocalisation. To the inexperienced this may look like a seizure, but if this occurs during excited play or in response to a companion or enjoyable enrichment source such as a favourite bed, or a pile of hay, and if normal activity resumes immediately, this is nothing to worry about and is a sign that your guinea pig is very happy. Some popcorning guinea pigs can literally bounce of walls and the floor - like every human dances differently, every guinea pig has their individual style of popcorning.
Sleeping
Sleeping may also disconcert an inexperienced owner, due to the normal guinea pig habit of sleeping with the eyes open. Perhaps the guinea pig is lying down with a somewhat glazed expression, and does not respond to you immediately- or they may sleep standing up, and appear as if they are unresponsive. Most sleeping guinea pigs can be gently roused by speaking to them in a happy friendly voice, or rustling a food bag, or rattling their food dish, in a familiar way- they should then wake up and reassure you that there was nothing more sinister going on than a nap.
Neurological and CBS symptoms that can have different causes
Head tilt and ear scratching/pawing
Head tilts are not just a symptom of CBS or another neurological problem.
Other causes can include:
- Ear infections. Untreated ear infections (outer, middle and inner ear) can cause permanent head tilts or kill.
- A build-up of wax in the outer ear (some piggies and breeds are more prone to this)
- E.cuniculi - only with rabbits in the same household or in possible contact with outdoors guinea pigs. Please be aware that the owner can also be the transmitter. Ideally, guinea pigs and rabbits are kept in different rooms and the guinea pigs are always fed, handled and cleaned first to minimise the risk of transmission from rabbits to guinea pigs.
- Rabbit ear mites (psoroptes cuniculi) - only in close proximity to rabbits (domestic or wild)
- Insects, hay or other things accidentally getting into the ear and causing discomfort or irritation
Please see a vet promptly with any head tilt; the chance of them correcting themselves is much higher if they are treated promptly. PLEASE never pour anything into an ear on spec; it can make things much worse and cause excruciating pain.
Sudden blindness
Please note that some cataracts or nuclear sclerosis (clouding over of the eye lens) can develop incredibly quickly in a matter of just a very few days. Some guinea pigs can be born blind without any outward signs or being lethals. If you suspect blindness, please see a vet for a check.
Guinea Lynx :: Eyes
Falling to the side and other mobility issues
You can see balance issues also in guinea pigs with other neurological issues (seizures, e.cuniculi or strokes).
More possible mobility issues are listed in the link below, which also details how you can best look after guinea pigs with mobility/balance/head lifting etc. issues.
Frailer guinea pigs or guinea pigs with arthritis can struggle with balance and struggle to get up if they fall over.
Looking after guinea pigs with limited or no mobility
Caring for Older Piggies and Facing the End - A practical and supportive information collection
Eyes: Runny eyes or missing blink / cleaning reflex / spilt cleaning fluid
A runny eye is primarily a sign of pain and discomfort, whether that is something getting into or stuck in the eye or a not ulcerating eye injury; they can also be a reaction to strong drafts, a sign of conjunctivitis and not just CBS. Please have runny eyes vet checked; especially is the eye is drawn in/smaller (often sign of an eye injury) or the watery tear fluid is constant or frequently recurring. Spilled or not fully reabsorbed milky-white tear fluid can occasionally happen without it being a problem.
A missing blink/clean reflex can also indicate a serious eye injury or be the result of a stroke. Please lubricate with plain artificial tear gel if possible (effect longer lasting, apply 3 times a dat) or plain artificual tear drops (apply up to 6 times a day).
One-sided face and body issues
One-sided facial or body responses can also be caused by a stroke.
Please make sure to check whether the eye on the affected side is hydrated/regularly cleaned and have the teeth check for one-sided dental overgrowth as a result of either a stroke, CBS or a brewing dental root or retrobulbar (behind the eye) abscess. Slanted incisors are often a first sign that one side of the mouth is used more for chewing, which can eventually lead to one sided dental overgrowth.
A vet check is recommended in any case.
Dental issues
Slanted, jagged or inwards pointing incisors can point to problem at the back like a brewing abscess or another pain issue, misalignment etc. and increasing dental overgrowth due to uneven chewing and no longer meeting and self-sharpen as a result of dental overgrowth.
Please keep in mind that the crucial back teeth are ground down by the very abrasive silica in grass/hay, which is the mainstay of a cavy diet and against which dental growth rate has evolved. Fibrous support feeding and timothy based recovery formulas replace mainly the ca. 75% hay/grass fibre in the diet and not the 20% of veg and fresh herbs.
Before suspecting CBS for dental overgrowth, please check whether you are actually overfeeding soft foods like veg, fruit or pellets, which does result in your piggies potentially not eating enough hay.
Gradual dental overgrowth (the premolars growing spurs) combines with other symptoms like increasingly slower chewing, picking up and dropping food that can no longer be chewed, preferring soft and then finely sliced foods like grass blades, fresh cilantro or finely sliced lettuce and eventually drooling (which in itself can indicate a number of issues that prevent the constantly produced saliva being swallowed or passing through the gut (dental spurs bridging/caging the tongue and inhibiting swallowing; heat stroke and pregnancy toxaemia and any blockages of the esophagus or gut). The change to a greater proportion of soft foods due to dental overgrowth can also lead to looser poos.
Please always switch from the normal life-long weekly weigh-in and body check (which should ideally include a quick look at the incisors) to weigh-in daily and stepping in with hay fibre based support feed.
Cavy dental savvy vets are sadly rare (it is not part of the curriculum) so please enquire and if in doubt preferably see an exotics vet. Non-veterinary DIY filing an burring can do permanent damage.
More information on feeding support:
All About Syringe Feeding and Medicating Guinea Pigs with Videos and Pictures
How to Improvise Feeding Support in an Emergency
Emergency and Crisis Care as well as Bridging Care until a Vet Appointment
- Disconcerting normal behaviours
- Neurological and CBS symptoms with more than one cause
- Seizures - symptoms and causes
- E.cuniculi
- Strokes
- CBS Syndrome/Walled-in Otitis Media (link)
2 Home care tips, welfare and end of life considerations
With great thanks to @PigglePuggle, who has researched and written this guide for The Guinea Pig Forum.
In this guide we will consider some other things which may initially present with similar symptoms to suspected CBS or that cause (or could be mistaken) for neurological symptoms.
These include:
- Disconcerting normal behaviours which an inexperienced owner may mistake for neurological problems
- Common CBS symptoms that can have different causes
- Neurological disorders: Seizures, E. cuniculi infection and Stroke
Disconcerting normal behaviours
It is quite common for a new and loving guinea pig owner to be very worried about which behaviours of guinea pigs are normal, and which are not. Two common aspects of normal guinea pig behaviour which are often mistaken for neurological problems are “popcorning”, and also sleeping.
Popcorning
Popcorning is a common and positive behaviour seen in happy and lively guinea pigs during play and social interactions, especially in youngsters or in males socialising with, or getting a pheromone sniff of, females. Popcorning is literally a guinea pig jumping of for joy, often they suddenly leap in the air and twitch their back legs, sometimes making a high pitched vocalisation. To the inexperienced this may look like a seizure, but if this occurs during excited play or in response to a companion or enjoyable enrichment source such as a favourite bed, or a pile of hay, and if normal activity resumes immediately, this is nothing to worry about and is a sign that your guinea pig is very happy. Some popcorning guinea pigs can literally bounce of walls and the floor - like every human dances differently, every guinea pig has their individual style of popcorning.
Sleeping
Sleeping may also disconcert an inexperienced owner, due to the normal guinea pig habit of sleeping with the eyes open. Perhaps the guinea pig is lying down with a somewhat glazed expression, and does not respond to you immediately- or they may sleep standing up, and appear as if they are unresponsive. Most sleeping guinea pigs can be gently roused by speaking to them in a happy friendly voice, or rustling a food bag, or rattling their food dish, in a familiar way- they should then wake up and reassure you that there was nothing more sinister going on than a nap.
Neurological and CBS symptoms that can have different causes
Head tilt and ear scratching/pawing
Head tilts are not just a symptom of CBS or another neurological problem.
Other causes can include:
- Ear infections. Untreated ear infections (outer, middle and inner ear) can cause permanent head tilts or kill.
- A build-up of wax in the outer ear (some piggies and breeds are more prone to this)
- E.cuniculi - only with rabbits in the same household or in possible contact with outdoors guinea pigs. Please be aware that the owner can also be the transmitter. Ideally, guinea pigs and rabbits are kept in different rooms and the guinea pigs are always fed, handled and cleaned first to minimise the risk of transmission from rabbits to guinea pigs.
- Rabbit ear mites (psoroptes cuniculi) - only in close proximity to rabbits (domestic or wild)
- Insects, hay or other things accidentally getting into the ear and causing discomfort or irritation
Please see a vet promptly with any head tilt; the chance of them correcting themselves is much higher if they are treated promptly. PLEASE never pour anything into an ear on spec; it can make things much worse and cause excruciating pain.
Sudden blindness
Please note that some cataracts or nuclear sclerosis (clouding over of the eye lens) can develop incredibly quickly in a matter of just a very few days. Some guinea pigs can be born blind without any outward signs or being lethals. If you suspect blindness, please see a vet for a check.
Guinea Lynx :: Eyes
Falling to the side and other mobility issues
You can see balance issues also in guinea pigs with other neurological issues (seizures, e.cuniculi or strokes).
More possible mobility issues are listed in the link below, which also details how you can best look after guinea pigs with mobility/balance/head lifting etc. issues.
Frailer guinea pigs or guinea pigs with arthritis can struggle with balance and struggle to get up if they fall over.
Looking after guinea pigs with limited or no mobility
Caring for Older Piggies and Facing the End - A practical and supportive information collection
Eyes: Runny eyes or missing blink / cleaning reflex / spilt cleaning fluid
A runny eye is primarily a sign of pain and discomfort, whether that is something getting into or stuck in the eye or a not ulcerating eye injury; they can also be a reaction to strong drafts, a sign of conjunctivitis and not just CBS. Please have runny eyes vet checked; especially is the eye is drawn in/smaller (often sign of an eye injury) or the watery tear fluid is constant or frequently recurring. Spilled or not fully reabsorbed milky-white tear fluid can occasionally happen without it being a problem.
A missing blink/clean reflex can also indicate a serious eye injury or be the result of a stroke. Please lubricate with plain artificial tear gel if possible (effect longer lasting, apply 3 times a dat) or plain artificual tear drops (apply up to 6 times a day).
One-sided face and body issues
One-sided facial or body responses can also be caused by a stroke.
Please make sure to check whether the eye on the affected side is hydrated/regularly cleaned and have the teeth check for one-sided dental overgrowth as a result of either a stroke, CBS or a brewing dental root or retrobulbar (behind the eye) abscess. Slanted incisors are often a first sign that one side of the mouth is used more for chewing, which can eventually lead to one sided dental overgrowth.
A vet check is recommended in any case.
Dental issues
Slanted, jagged or inwards pointing incisors can point to problem at the back like a brewing abscess or another pain issue, misalignment etc. and increasing dental overgrowth due to uneven chewing and no longer meeting and self-sharpen as a result of dental overgrowth.
Please keep in mind that the crucial back teeth are ground down by the very abrasive silica in grass/hay, which is the mainstay of a cavy diet and against which dental growth rate has evolved. Fibrous support feeding and timothy based recovery formulas replace mainly the ca. 75% hay/grass fibre in the diet and not the 20% of veg and fresh herbs.
Before suspecting CBS for dental overgrowth, please check whether you are actually overfeeding soft foods like veg, fruit or pellets, which does result in your piggies potentially not eating enough hay.
Gradual dental overgrowth (the premolars growing spurs) combines with other symptoms like increasingly slower chewing, picking up and dropping food that can no longer be chewed, preferring soft and then finely sliced foods like grass blades, fresh cilantro or finely sliced lettuce and eventually drooling (which in itself can indicate a number of issues that prevent the constantly produced saliva being swallowed or passing through the gut (dental spurs bridging/caging the tongue and inhibiting swallowing; heat stroke and pregnancy toxaemia and any blockages of the esophagus or gut). The change to a greater proportion of soft foods due to dental overgrowth can also lead to looser poos.
Please always switch from the normal life-long weekly weigh-in and body check (which should ideally include a quick look at the incisors) to weigh-in daily and stepping in with hay fibre based support feed.
Cavy dental savvy vets are sadly rare (it is not part of the curriculum) so please enquire and if in doubt preferably see an exotics vet. Non-veterinary DIY filing an burring can do permanent damage.
More information on feeding support:
All About Syringe Feeding and Medicating Guinea Pigs with Videos and Pictures
How to Improvise Feeding Support in an Emergency
Emergency and Crisis Care as well as Bridging Care until a Vet Appointment