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Possible Eye Injury, Advice Needed

KatieM

Junior Guinea Pig
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Was going to bed and noticed my Spence was looking a little odd (see video) eye watering holding it shut, tilting his head. So I got him out and began examining and comparing his eye to see if he had something in it and then bam a piece of hay came out from behind his eye…umm ouch!
IMG_5448.webp

It could have been anywhere from a couple minutes to an hour. He gave a big wheek when the hay piece came out but wasn’t otherwise vocalizing.
IMG_5447.webp

Since he’s eating hay and laying with me but his eye is still very red and watery and he’s winking it. Do we think this warrants a vet visit? I’m worried he could have damaged his eye cause that piece of hay does not look friendly!

https://youtube.com/shorts/RMHbnMiduk8?si=7To4pV7fo6azE1BN
 
Poor boy!
Yes, possible eye injuries should always be seen by a vet as soon as possible because they can get really bad very quickly.
I hope there wasn't much damage done. Good luck at the vet!
 
I’m sorry to hear this.

Yes, he does need to see a vet.
Any haypoke (or other injury to the eye) is considered urgent and always needs to be seen within 24 hours.
The usual treatment for haypoke is antibiotic eye drops and painkillers. We also recommend a repair gel (to be given at an different time to the prescribed antibiotic drops)
 
I’m sorry to hear this.

Yes, he does need to see a vet.
Any haypoke (or other injury to the eye) is considered urgent and always needs to be seen within 24 hours.
The usual treatment for haypoke is antibiotic eye drops and painkillers. We also recommend a repair gel (to be given at an different time to the prescribed antibiotic drops)
Thank you! I will be calling the vet in the morning to get him in!

Boy am I glad the pig who likes me the most got poked…eyedrops would be hard on any other pig!
 
Thank you! I will be calling the vet in the morning to get him in!

Boy am I glad the pig who likes me the most got poked…eyedrops would be hard on any other pig!

Hi

I am very sorry. Hay pokes are a unfortunately common hazard with giving your piggies an enriched life with romps and naps in the hay.

You may find these links here very helpful and may want to bookmark them; especially if you live in a different time zone to the UK and don't necessarily have quick vet access or live in a country without out-of-hours vet cover:

This is our one stop emergency and crisis care collection with links to all the necessary information for how soon you need to see a vet, seeing vets not experienced with guinea pigs (safe and unsafe medications links) and our crisis care guides, including how to improvise potentially life-saving feeding support:

This is our First Aid Guide which covers a range of the most common scenarios with practical advice until you can see a vet/how quickly to should ideally see a vet:

All the best for a quick recovery.
 
Hi

I am very sorry. Hay pokes are a unfortunately common hazard with giving your piggies an enriched life with romps and naps in the hay.

You may find these links here very helpful and may want to bookmark them; especially if you live in a different time zone to the UK and don't necessarily have quick vet access or live in a country without out-of-hours vet cover:

This is our one stop emergency and crisis care collection with links to all the necessary information for how soon you need to see a vet, seeing vets not experienced with guinea pigs (safe and unsafe medications links) and our crisis care guides, including how to improvise potentially life-saving feeding support:

This is our First Aid Guide which covers a range of the most common scenarios with practical advice until you can see a vet/how quickly to should ideally see a vet:

All the best for a quick recovery.
These piggies teach me something new everyday! Had no idea hay pokes were so common but it makes perfect sense!

Thank you for those links! We don’t have an after hours vet and do live in the UK. But we have two nearby vets I can call who will hopefully see him today!
 
These piggies teach me something new everyday! Had no idea hay pokes were so common but it makes perfect sense!

Thank you for those links! We don’t have an after hours vet and do live in the UK. But we have two nearby vets I can call who will hopefully see him today!

You say you live in the UK?….Your profile shows you are in the US?

All UK vets have a surgery that covers them out of hours - you just your normal surgery and their answer phone will give you the details of which surgery covers them
 
You say you live in the UK?….Your profile shows you are in the US?

All UK vets have a surgery that covers them out of hours - you just your normal surgery and their answer phone will give you the details of which surgery covers them
Oh whoops that autocorrected. I am US! Sorry about that
 
Thank you all for informing me on Hay Stab. Spence and I made our way into the vet, who stained and checked his eye. We got the hat completely out last night but he does indeed have a pretty large ulcer, almost his entire eye! The vet was shocked he wasn’t still winking and acting painful. Although as soon as he got close he freaked out.

Antibiotic eye drops and oral pain meds for the next week until our recheck! Trusting in my boy to get himself all healed up ❤️
 

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Thank you all for informing me on Hay Stab. Spence and I made our way into the vet, who stained and checked his eye. We got the hat completely out last night but he does indeed have a pretty large ulcer, almost his entire eye! The vet was shocked he wasn’t still winking and acting painful. Although as soon as he got close he freaked out.

Antibiotic eye drops and oral pain meds for the next week until our recheck! Trusting in my boy to get himself all healed up ❤️
Hope Spence is feeling better very soon x
 
Thank you all for informing me on Hay Stab. Spence and I made our way into the vet, who stained and checked his eye. We got the hat completely out last night but he does indeed have a pretty large ulcer, almost his entire eye! The vet was shocked he wasn’t still winking and acting painful. Although as soon as he got close he freaked out.

Antibiotic eye drops and oral pain meds for the next week until our recheck! Trusting in my boy to get himself all healed up ❤️

Eye injuries deteriorate very quickly but they thankfully also heal up pretty straight forward if caught early enough. It can look rather dramatic but is not uncommon because it can come up to that extent in a matter of just a few hours -- guinea pig eyes are a lot smaller than dog, cat or rabbit eyes, after all.

What I would recommend is to have some carbomer based tear gel at home; any brand will do. It can be applied asap and helps to speed up the healing process. You have to however wait for at least half an hour after applying any medicated eye drops to allow them to be fully absorbed before using the tear gel. But it will also take care of any itchiness/dryness in the wake of any antibiotic eye drop and make the eye feel more comfortable.

All the best. For best application, gently pull down the lower eyelid and aim any drops into the gap - that is what vet nurses do.
 
Thank you all for informing me on Hay Stab. Spence and I made our way into the vet, who stained and checked his eye. We got the hat completely out last night but he does indeed have a pretty large ulcer, almost his entire eye! The vet was shocked he wasn’t still winking and acting painful. Although as soon as he got close he freaked out.

Antibiotic eye drops and oral pain meds for the next week until our recheck! Trusting in my boy to get himself all healed up ❤️

Eye injuries deteriorate very quickly but they thankfully also heal up pretty straight forward if caught early enough. It can look rather dramatic but is not uncommon because it can come up to that extent in a matter of just a few hours -- guinea pig eyes are a lot smaller than dog, cat or rabbit eyes, after all.

What I would recommend is to have some carbomer based tear gel at home; any brand will do. It can be applied asap and helps to speed up the healing process. You have to however wait for at least half an hour after applying any medicated eye drops to allow them to be fully absorbed before using the tear gel. But it will also take care of any itchiness/dryness in the wake of any antibiotic eye drop and make the eye feel more comfortable.

All the best. For best application, gently pull down the lower eyelid and aim any drops into the gap - that is what vet nurses do.
Thank you, I will look into getting those! Yes our vet showed me how exactly to do the drops!

Overall he’s doing great!
 
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