I have been doing fecals everyday. Yesterday's fecal looked like the coccidia was better. Today it is wall to wall again. I guess it can change that fast. We already established that I'm not a biologist but I think because she has had so much Albon, it has grown resistant to it.
I'm done with vet Kingofnobby, I can hear your next post. :lol:
After your experience with your local vets , .... I'd be telling them to F off too. (They have been treating you and Bella as a nice little income stream while being totally incompetent.)
Good vibes are being sent in Bella's direction .... hope the new meds start to make an impact soon.
One thing .... probably pointless checking the poos each time , it's likely to take weeks to really see any difference purely because her load is so big and as a consequence of the length of the coccidia life cycle (about a month).
Oh no, look at where your daily conversations with your spouse have gone. :lol: Next it'll be....." Honey have you done your fecal test this week ? Don't forget your probiotic. I packed your steamer in your briefcase ."
If the liquid calcium is as nice as the stuff I've given to sick / injured rescued skinks , she''ll love the stuff and want to lick the dregs off your fingers....
I'd keep up with the liquid calcium at least til she's 2 yrs old , only really sure way of getting the right amount of calcium into her , dusting and gutloading is very hit and miss in that regard no matter how well you do it.
She had her first dose of Baycox 24hrs ago. This morning I really was not expecting much but she seems to have more energy.
I started dropping butter worms and hornworms in front of her and she would barely look at them.
I dropped a wax worm on the other side of her enclosure and she ran over and ate it and then ate 7 more.
I read that they will get hooked on wax worms and will not eat anything else. How big of an issue is this? Do wax worms offer any nutritional value at all?
I read that they have a high fat content. That might be a good thing at this point.
Her willing to eat on her own is good news, indeed
It's unfortunate it's waxworms, however :lol:
Waxworms are basically like us eating a snickers bar. They're all fat, some moisture, but offer little nutrition other than getting some weight on them. They can get addicted and refuse everything else. My male does this with supers, his favorite food. He will refuse dubias now, even still, and hold out for supers.
Waxworms are generally offered as like 1 or 2 as a treat each week
Her willing to eat on her own is good news, indeed
It's unfortunate it's waxworms, however :lol:
Waxworms are basically like us eating a snickers bar. They're all fat, some moisture, but offer little nutrition other than getting some weight on them. They can get addicted and refuse everything else. My male does this with supers, his favorite food. He will refuse dubias now, even still, and hold out for supers.
Waxworms are generally offered as like 1 or 2 as a treat each week
Sure do.
I fed Richter, my big male, on this stuff as a baby as he would not eat for a week and a half after I brought him home. I bought a separate curve tip syringe since he was so tiny at the time.
I also fed this to my girl, Simon, as she stopped eating on her own for 2 months prior to passing away from kidney cancer
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
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
She had her first dose of Baycox 24hrs ago. This morning I really was not expecting much but she seems to have more energy.
I started dropping butter worms and hornworms in front of her and she would barely look at them.
I dropped a wax worm on the other side of her enclosure and she ran over and ate it and then ate 7 more.
I read that they will get hooked on wax worms and will not eat anything else. How big of an issue is this? Do wax worms offer any nutritional value at all?
I read that they have a high fat content. That might be a good thing at this point.
See viewtopic.php?f=76&t=234999&p=1807834#p1807834 for info on common and less common feeders , I'd let her eat what ever she likes and thankful she's eating it , worry about her being a waxworm junkie later when she's healthy and coccidia free.