Not exact matches
Sometimes, guinea pigs, chinchillas and rabbits (although rabbits are technically lagomorphs, not
rodents, they do have teeth that grow continuously)
suffer from overgrown molars or back teeth, which make eating challenging or even painful.
Conventional wisdom among veterinarians holds that pets, especially cats, can
suffer from rodenticide toxicity after consuming
rodents that have been poisoned.
The rabbit digestive tract is physiologically more similar to that of a horse than to that of a
rodent or primate, and the intestine and related organs can
suffer from an overindulgence in starchy, fatty foods.
Ferrets, rabbits,
rodents, and even sugar gliders, hedgehogs, and bearded dragons can
suffer from dental disease.
Rodents such as guinea pigs and chinchillas also have continuously growing teeth and frequently
suffer from painful tooth root impaction.