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
Those slide pictures above are the results of me moving the slide around and looking for the biggest "clump" of it. It is more widespread than I've been seeing but it also seemed to be an increase over yesterday. I realize that it's cyclic but the pattern as usually been it get's better and then progressively worse again, to the point that it is wall to wall on the slide. When it gets to that point, it really shows in her behavior.
Taking pictures with the phone worked better than I thought. Alot of that stuff is drifting and moving.
I'm glad you were able to find it!
Hopefully those meds can help. Without an experienced vet, kind of sucks to be handling it alone.
It's nice you were able to get photos. I'm curious to see what those with more experience with fecals say about your images.
Her condition appears to be deteriorating. The wood she is on is new, not contaminated. I just put it in a little while ago so she can get to her light. I placed her up there. She did not climb.
Poor little one....Maybe quit the meds. for now and put her in the temp. home. The basking platform is pretty high + she can fall from there if she's disoriented.
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.
I've treated rescued skinks with antibiotics for 6 months (was a wild skink who I rescued from a cat), 3 months is nothing and quite usual when reptile are sick ( very slow metabolisms ).
Most of those three months she was being treated by an incompetent vet who refused to prescribe anything other than Albon and no attempt was made (until last week) to sterilize her viv or to actually give her antiparasitic meds or to use an effective treatment regime ie
>> antiparasitic drug
>> antibiotic drug for secondary infections in the gut due to parasites attacking soft tissues in the gut
>> frequent sterilization of the viv.
and keep her warm 24/7 while sick to help boost her immune system.
Keep in mind the length of the parasite's life cycle (about 4 weeks per generation) and that the antiparasitic drug will be targeted at one or two stages of this parasite's life cycle and wont kill 100% of the parasite , so you must keep to the treatment schedule for maybe 2 or 3 life cycles and continue checking for the presence of the parasite in the floats.
She's likely zonked out as a consequence of the new meds (you are sure of the doseage , which I expect is likely based on body-mass of the sick animal, careful not to OD her with them).
I think it will be wise to put her in a very Spartan temporary tub for now where she don't need to climb to get to the basking spot or the uv.
I also think it's very unwise to stop the meds so soon and so abruptly .... this is what creates drug-resistance ( a lot of the parasites and bacteria have been exposed to the med and if you don't continue giving it they will adapt and become impossible to kill using these meds when you restart , as their offspring will have immunity or a much higher tolerance to the meds , result is the coccidia will become even harder to get rid off.
Poor little one....Maybe quit the meds.<<<< that's probably a very BAD idea ==> will only result in the coccidia becoming resistant to the current meds , akin to drug resistant bacteria ( commonly called superbugs ) and drug resistant strains of malaria this way
for now and put her in the temp. home. The basking platform is pretty high + she can fall from there if she's disoriented.
I think he needs to make sure he's giving the correct doseage , I've not seen the doseage information / guidance on the drugs he's using now, but this information should be either on the box , tube , bottle or available to printout on the drug maker's webpage.
Can I help double check the dosage? What do you mean it stated use by May 2014, are you kidding
me? So it was an expired liquid?
That is absolutely not right, it could potentially make her ill instead of better. What is the strength of the solution & how much are you giving her?