Tayz
Teenage Guinea Pig
ok, my 3 guineapigs have had bad mites and we think we have got rid of them all(still treating just in case) but now they have lots of scabs on their bums...i searched this on google and found this.....is this true......please.....i want someone to say no.......it says the animals dies within 3 weeks...have my pigs only got 3 weeks to live? i'm really panicking...
Ivermectin is used to rid animals and humans of many internal and external (blood sucking) parasites . Lice and hair mites which do not ingest the blood of the host are not affected by ivermectin administered orally or by injection (See notes at bottom of page).
In guinea pigs, ivermectin is the drug of choice for treatment of the selnick mite. Trixacarus caviae, a burrowing sarcoptid mite, is a member of the arachnid family. Transmission occurs primarily through direct contact with infested animals although eggs can be carried to them inadvertently. Mites will seldom leave the host unless brushed onto the bedding or as a result of overpopulation or the death of the host. With no host, they will usually die within 3 weeks. However the eggs, which are laid in burrows in the skin, may survive off the host for long periods of time. These species specific microscopic mites cause unbearable itchiness for the animal and can result in thinning and/or patchy loss of hair and scurfing of the skin (may resemble dandruff). Severe infestations can be life threatening. The most serious infestations occur in the young and ill older animals subject to stress and poor environmental conditions. The response in healthy animals, perhaps due to grooming or suppressed immune response is less severe. "Maximal parasite load is reached approximately 1 month after infection (Rothwell et al., 1991) then slowly regresses if left untreated. Mortality is common in some reports." (Harkness and Wagner)
is it true...please don't be -prays-
Ivermectin is used to rid animals and humans of many internal and external (blood sucking) parasites . Lice and hair mites which do not ingest the blood of the host are not affected by ivermectin administered orally or by injection (See notes at bottom of page).
In guinea pigs, ivermectin is the drug of choice for treatment of the selnick mite. Trixacarus caviae, a burrowing sarcoptid mite, is a member of the arachnid family. Transmission occurs primarily through direct contact with infested animals although eggs can be carried to them inadvertently. Mites will seldom leave the host unless brushed onto the bedding or as a result of overpopulation or the death of the host. With no host, they will usually die within 3 weeks. However the eggs, which are laid in burrows in the skin, may survive off the host for long periods of time. These species specific microscopic mites cause unbearable itchiness for the animal and can result in thinning and/or patchy loss of hair and scurfing of the skin (may resemble dandruff). Severe infestations can be life threatening. The most serious infestations occur in the young and ill older animals subject to stress and poor environmental conditions. The response in healthy animals, perhaps due to grooming or suppressed immune response is less severe. "Maximal parasite load is reached approximately 1 month after infection (Rothwell et al., 1991) then slowly regresses if left untreated. Mortality is common in some reports." (Harkness and Wagner)
is it true...please don't be -prays-