- Not eating and the need to eat fibre
- How much to feed a very ill guinea pig?
- Important advice for syringe feeding
Not eating and the need to eat fibre
If your guinea pig goes off any food or suddenly eats noticeably less, then it is seriously ill and needs to see a vet for a diagnosis and treatment for whatever problem is causing the loss of appetite. In many cases, it is either the need to breathe (which comes before the need to drink or the need to eat), the inability to eat or swallow (like problems with the teeth, especially those at the back, a mouth infection or a blockage in the guts) or there is very often a pain issue at the bottom of it that requires a hands-on examination or a scan.
The whole list of what could cause anorexia is listed here: Guinea Lynx :: Anorexia (not eating)
You need to step in with syringe feeding immediately in order to keep your guinea alive until it can be seen by a vet and until any medication can kick in – which may take several days – until the appetite gradually returns.
Please note that syringing only warm water doesn't keep your guinea pig alive for long or prevents the gut from closing down.
How much to feed a very ill guinea pig?
When dealing total loss of appetite, aim for as close to 40-60 ml in 24 hours as you can get; the closer you can get to the upper end, the better. If that is not possible, every little bit more in can make a difference towards survival.
Use scales to check the food intake once daily at the same time; don’t rely on your eyes when you see a piggy nibbling on a little food! The overwhelming majority of the daily food intake is hay, and you can’t control that! We see so many people reporting that ‘my guinea pig has eaten a little bit of lettuce’ – with is about 1% of what it should eat or less and doesn’t mean that said guinea pig is going to survive.
How To Pick Up And Weigh Your Guinea Pigs Safely
Weight - Monitoring and Management
You can always make syringe feed in an emergency with a 1 ml needle-less syringe from a pharmacy and some mushed pellets as long as you prep the syringe tip as shown in our syringe feeding guide to allow the fibre to pass through.
However, we recommend that you have a little first aid kit at home to be able step in promptly and keep your guinea pig alive until you can see a vet and the meds do their work.
Important advice for syringe feeding
When syringe feeding, please do not just press the contents of a syringe into the mouth as quickly as you can; this can lead to them going in to the lungs if your guinea pig struggles with swallowing and can kill. A timothy hay based fine gring recovery product is best but in a pinch you can soak pellets in warm - in the latter case, you need to cut off the syringe tip with scissors just below where it widens so the much rougher pellet fibre can pass through but the syringe plunger is still held in.
Ideally you push the syringe gently, little and with many pauses to allow your guinea pig to swallow and to chew as long as it is no actively taking food from your syringe. Give only as much as it has the strength and capacity to swallow. In the very ill and weak, this can be 1/10 to 1/3 of a small 1 ml syringe, and it may take as much 10 minutes to work your way through one syringe full.
Aim for 40-60 ml in 24 hours for a guinea pig that is totally off their food and where you struggle to give 5-10 ml per feeding session; feed every 2 hours during the day and if necessary once during the night if your piggy is very weak.
If your piggy is able to take 10-15 ml, then you aim for 60-90 ml in 24 hours; you can start reducing the number of feeding sessions according to the feed intake.
These are our practical tips for improvising feed with what you have at hand:
Here is our detailed illustrated beginners guide that talks you through every aspect and shows you exactly how, how much and how often as well as how to handle your guinea pig in a range of situations and depending on how cooperative it is.
All About Syringe Feeding and Medicating Guinea Pigs with Videos and Pictures
Emergency, Crisis and Bridging Care until a Vet Appointment
Probiotics, Recovery Foods And Vitamin C: Overview With Product Links
Looking After Guinea Pigs With Limited or No Mobility (practical care tips for ill guinea pigs that are not moving around much)
- How much to feed a very ill guinea pig?
- Important advice for syringe feeding
Not eating and the need to eat fibre
If your guinea pig goes off any food or suddenly eats noticeably less, then it is seriously ill and needs to see a vet for a diagnosis and treatment for whatever problem is causing the loss of appetite. In many cases, it is either the need to breathe (which comes before the need to drink or the need to eat), the inability to eat or swallow (like problems with the teeth, especially those at the back, a mouth infection or a blockage in the guts) or there is very often a pain issue at the bottom of it that requires a hands-on examination or a scan.
The whole list of what could cause anorexia is listed here: Guinea Lynx :: Anorexia (not eating)
You need to step in with syringe feeding immediately in order to keep your guinea alive until it can be seen by a vet and until any medication can kick in – which may take several days – until the appetite gradually returns.
Please note that syringing only warm water doesn't keep your guinea pig alive for long or prevents the gut from closing down.
How much to feed a very ill guinea pig?
When dealing total loss of appetite, aim for as close to 40-60 ml in 24 hours as you can get; the closer you can get to the upper end, the better. If that is not possible, every little bit more in can make a difference towards survival.
Use scales to check the food intake once daily at the same time; don’t rely on your eyes when you see a piggy nibbling on a little food! The overwhelming majority of the daily food intake is hay, and you can’t control that! We see so many people reporting that ‘my guinea pig has eaten a little bit of lettuce’ – with is about 1% of what it should eat or less and doesn’t mean that said guinea pig is going to survive.
How To Pick Up And Weigh Your Guinea Pigs Safely
Weight - Monitoring and Management
You can always make syringe feed in an emergency with a 1 ml needle-less syringe from a pharmacy and some mushed pellets as long as you prep the syringe tip as shown in our syringe feeding guide to allow the fibre to pass through.
However, we recommend that you have a little first aid kit at home to be able step in promptly and keep your guinea pig alive until you can see a vet and the meds do their work.
1 Important Proviso
2 First Aid Kit
- General Items
- Comfort
- Useful to have in stock
3 Illness and Recovery First Aid Tips
- Accessing vet care and when it is too late for help
- Loss of appetite and weight (Feeding support, Recovery foods, digestive aids and rehydration)
- Accident, bites and injury (Wound disinfection and bleeding)
- Eyes and ears
- Breathing
- Acute heart and circulation failure
-...
2 First Aid Kit
- General Items
- Comfort
- Useful to have in stock
3 Illness and Recovery First Aid Tips
- Accessing vet care and when it is too late for help
- Loss of appetite and weight (Feeding support, Recovery foods, digestive aids and rehydration)
- Accident, bites and injury (Wound disinfection and bleeding)
- Eyes and ears
- Breathing
- Acute heart and circulation failure
-...
- Wiebke
- Replies: 1
- Forum: Emergency Information and Care
Important advice for syringe feeding
When syringe feeding, please do not just press the contents of a syringe into the mouth as quickly as you can; this can lead to them going in to the lungs if your guinea pig struggles with swallowing and can kill. A timothy hay based fine gring recovery product is best but in a pinch you can soak pellets in warm - in the latter case, you need to cut off the syringe tip with scissors just below where it widens so the much rougher pellet fibre can pass through but the syringe plunger is still held in.
Ideally you push the syringe gently, little and with many pauses to allow your guinea pig to swallow and to chew as long as it is no actively taking food from your syringe. Give only as much as it has the strength and capacity to swallow. In the very ill and weak, this can be 1/10 to 1/3 of a small 1 ml syringe, and it may take as much 10 minutes to work your way through one syringe full.
Aim for 40-60 ml in 24 hours for a guinea pig that is totally off their food and where you struggle to give 5-10 ml per feeding session; feed every 2 hours during the day and if necessary once during the night if your piggy is very weak.
If your piggy is able to take 10-15 ml, then you aim for 60-90 ml in 24 hours; you can start reducing the number of feeding sessions according to the feed intake.
These are our practical tips for improvising feed with what you have at hand:
1 Feed
- Important crisis management resources
- When is improvising necessary?
- Which food group am I replacing with my feeding support?
- How much and how often should I feed and water?
- What can I use that I have already got at home?
- Other possible easily available foods with their pros and cons
- How do I prep a syringe for rougher pellet fibre?
- What can I do without a syringe?
- The role of lukewarm water
2 Probiotics
- Probiotic products...
- Important crisis management resources
- When is improvising necessary?
- Which food group am I replacing with my feeding support?
- How much and how often should I feed and water?
- What can I use that I have already got at home?
- Other possible easily available foods with their pros and cons
- How do I prep a syringe for rougher pellet fibre?
- What can I do without a syringe?
- The role of lukewarm water
2 Probiotics
- Probiotic products...
- Wiebke
- Replies: 0
- Forum: Emergency Information and Care
Here is our detailed illustrated beginners guide that talks you through every aspect and shows you exactly how, how much and how often as well as how to handle your guinea pig in a range of situations and depending on how cooperative it is.
All About Syringe Feeding and Medicating Guinea Pigs with Videos and Pictures
Emergency, Crisis and Bridging Care until a Vet Appointment
Probiotics, Recovery Foods And Vitamin C: Overview With Product Links
Looking After Guinea Pigs With Limited or No Mobility (practical care tips for ill guinea pigs that are not moving around much)