It'll take a while to clear off all/most the coccidia, but I'm so glad she's feeling better.
Just use a pro biotic with it, monitor her, try and get her to eat on her own, have repti boost backup, and hopefully she'll start to grow in size
I bought a powder probiotic from beardeddragon.co. That's next. I got rid of all the dubias, again.
I have sprayed her enclosure with an ammonia based cleaner formulated for Coccidia. Says it kills it in two minutes. No need to rinse! <<<< I hope it actually works ....
I figure I have a couple of " I told you so's" coming.
Best you can hope for is about 80% mortality rate of coccidia using Ammonia based product with contact times to 30mins , see p84 extract
SP: Sporulation
IA: Inhibitory Activity
defined as follows :
The efficacy of the tested disinfectants was evaluated by obtaining their Inhibitory Activity (IA %) (sporulation inhibition% of the oocysts) as follow: after at least 7 days of each experiment, the number of sporulated oocysts in each tube were counted using MacMaster slide to get the percentage of sporulation, this percentage was subtracted from sporulation % of the control tube to get inhibitory activity of the tested disinfectant.
IA = {(sporulation % of control - sporulation % of disinfected oocysts) × 100}/ sporulation % of control
What's with the eye rolling ? Certainly you could get the gyst of that just like the rest of us ? :lol: No offense intended whatsoever, just a little humor for the morning wake up.
Surprisingly, I was able to use my phone and show a few examples of what her fecal looks like this morning. I simply held the phone's camera up to the microscope. They are not perfect.
Based on the photo I saw of her, she didn't look anywhere near being ready to be put down. Meds take a while, and a good pro biotic is very necessary to help restore what the meds destroy, otherwise they don't act right.
I'm again no medical professional by any means so I can't say whether those floats are normal, bad, or great, but remember coccidia and pin worms in small numbers are fine.
I do hope the meds help her, and if they don't, I would still really evaluate her before making any harsh decisions.
I'd honestly rather take her from you than see her be put down
It can be very frustrating, but that's likely the new medicine messing with her gut. She's still willing to eat, even if she is eating less. I also would not fret the minor weight loss. A single poo can be grams worth.
I made a pledge to Richter, my male, that the day he declines a super worm, his favorite, favorite food, is the day I would be worried. While he was being medicated for coccidia, he turned his head and closed his eyes at a super. I cried.
I immediately ordered the reptiphilus that day, and the day after having some, he started accepting food again, but in the meanwhile he went days without eating as it shipped
.....you really need to learn to cultivate a bit of patience when trying to rehabilitate a sick reptile, it takes a long time for them to respond and show marked improvements.
This is only early days in the treatment to eradicate coccidian and you are starting with a three pronged treatment way behind the 8 ball (because you had a incompetent vet and were given poor advise) so she was on a poor treatment regime allowing her guts to overrun with the parasite and you need make allowances for this .
Allow her at least month or two to show some improvement as the life cycle is about a month and the meds are usually targeted at specific stages in the parasite's lifecycle and totally ineffective outside this time window.
Patience? I've been dealing with this since the first of June.
After 3 months , there is a very distinct pattern that has developed in fighting this. I don't want to be negative but we'll see what tomorrows fecal looks like.
Based on the photo I saw of her, she didn't look anywhere near being ready to be put down. Meds take a while, and a good pro biotic is very necessary to help restore what the meds destroy, otherwise they don't act right.
I'm again no medical professional by any means so I can't say whether those floats are normal, bad, or great, but remember coccidia and pin worms in small numbers are fine.
I do hope the meds help her, and if they don't, I would still really evaluate her before making any harsh decisions.
I'd honestly rather take her from you than see her be put down