Back to Library

Guinea Pig Mites: Signs, Treatment, and Prevention

3 min readMay 12, 2026

If your guinea pig is scratching intensely, losing patches of fur, or β€” in severe cases β€” having seizure-like episodes from the pain, mites are a likely culprit. Mite infestations in guinea pigs are more common than many owners realize, and the condition can escalate quickly from uncomfortable to dangerous. The good news: once diagnosed, treatment is usually very effective.

Types of Mites That Affect Guinea Pigs

Trixacarus caviae (Sarcoptic Mange Mites)

This is the most dangerous and most common mite to affect guinea pigs (AEMV Pet Care Guides, 2024). Unlike some external parasites, Trixacarus mites burrow under the skin, causing intense irritation. The itching is described by vets as severe enough to trigger seizure-like episodes in some guinea pigs β€” the animal throws itself around in apparent agony. This is a medical emergency.

Trixacarus mites can also infect humans, causing temporary itching and skin irritation (though they cannot complete their life cycle on human skin).

Chirodiscoides caviae (Static Lice / Surface Mites)

These mites live on the hair shafts rather than burrowing under skin. They cause less severe symptoms β€” mainly itching, dandruff-like flaking, and a rough coat β€” and are often visible as tiny white specks clinging to hairs.

Signs of a Mite Infestation

  • Intense, frantic scratching β€” especially around the neck, shoulders, and back
  • Hair loss β€” often starting at the back of the neck and along the back
  • Crusting, scabbing, or thickened skin in affected areas
  • Seizure-like episodes β€” the guinea pig suddenly convulses, rolls, or throws itself about (severe Trixacarus infestation β€” emergency)
  • Restlessness and irritability
  • Weight loss in severe or prolonged cases

Why Mites Cause Such Severe Symptoms

Trixacarus mites burrow into the skin layers, releasing enzymes and debris that trigger an intense allergic immune response. The sensory overload this creates can overwhelm the nervous system, leading to the alarming seizure-like episodes. This is not a true neurological seizure β€” it is pain and sensory-driven β€” but it requires immediate veterinary intervention.

Diagnosis

A vet will perform a skin scraping and examine it under a microscope to identify the mite species. Sometimes mites are found easily; other times multiple scrapings are needed. Clinical signs alone can often justify beginning treatment before lab confirmation.

Treatment

  • Ivermectin β€” the primary treatment, given by injection or topical application by your exotic vet. Usually 2–3 doses spaced 2 weeks apart. Do NOT use ivermectin products formulated for large animals without veterinary guidance on dosing.
  • Selamectin (Revolution) β€” an alternative topical treatment sometimes used.
  • Environmental treatment β€” all bedding, cage accessories, and hideouts should be thoroughly cleaned and replaced. Mites can survive briefly in the environment.
  • Treat all guinea pigs in the household even if they show no symptoms β€” cross-infestation is common.

Prevention

  • Quarantine new guinea pigs for 2–3 weeks before introducing them to your existing pets.
  • Purchase guinea pigs from reputable sources β€” pet store guinea pigs have higher exposure risk.
  • Keep the cage clean β€” weekly full cleans reduce mite load.
  • Handle your guinea pigs regularly β€” this lets you check for early signs of skin issues.

What Owners Often Miss

Many guinea pig mite infestations go undetected for weeks because early symptoms β€” slight itching, minor dandruff β€” seem unremarkable. By the time owners recognize something is seriously wrong, the infestation may have progressed to the severe, painful stage. The key is knowing that any unexplained itching or hair loss in a guinea pig warrants veterinary investigation, even if it seems mild.

Additionally, mites are invisible to the naked eye in most cases. Don't assume your guinea pig is mite-free just because you can't see anything crawling on them. A skin scraping by an exotic vet is the only reliable way to diagnose or rule out Trixacarus mites.

Still Not Sure if Your Guinea Pig Needs a Vet?

When you're not sure if this is wait-and-see or call-tonight, Voyage AI Vet triages in under 2 minutes. Describe what you're seeing in chat, share photos of what you're seeing β€” your guinea pig's posture, any visible signs, and the affected area, or hop on a live video call if you want a second pair of eyes. Every answer comes with citations to the actual veterinary literature it's pulling from β€” so you see exactly where the guidance comes from, not just a chatbot's word.

Start a triage β†’

Free Β· No account Β· ~60 seconds

What's going on with your pet?

Describe symptoms or snap a photo. Voyage tells you urgency, home care, and whether you need a vet.

First, tell us about your pet

Breed and age make a real difference in how Voyage interprets symptoms.

Describe the symptoms

πŸ†Outperforms ChatGPT & Gemini🩺Vet-groundedπŸ”’Private

Love it? See everything Voyage can do