CAV
Dazed and Cornfused
Slapped by reality. Please read!
I recently acquired an '02 corn that started having feeding problems from day one. After eating on Monday, he immediately regurged. This was only his second feeding with me, and it was the second regurge. I got him into the vet teaching hospital at Texas A & M this morning to get checked out. The report is not good. Suspected cause: cryptosporidium.
I have been instructed to collect the regurge from this next feeding in order to confirm or deny the diagnosis. As you might expect, I am holding my breath. I hope that the test will confirm that it is only a simple parasitic infection and not crypto. With that said, if it is confirmed to be crypto, I will not hesitate for a second to destroy the animal in order to save the rest of my collection. My fingers are crossed that this is an isolated infection and I have caught it early before it spreads to other individuals.
Anyway, I thought that this would be a good time to do a little preaching. So here goes:
1. Although I take numerous precautions with sanitation, isolation and individual housing arrangements are critical! For those of you that insist on keeping multiple animals in the same enclosure, take note: If not for the precautionary practices that I have in place, I would be sitting here typing, knowing that I will likely lose thousands of dollars worth of snakes. I still may.
2. Don't assume away risk when buying an animal from anyone. Know who you are dealing with. Even if you trust them, take precautions like a quarantine to protect yourself. There is no doubt in my mind that this animal was sick when it arrived a few weeks ago. It was isolated, never fed successfully and so far is the only one with symptoms.
3. Educate yourself on your critters. Learn to recognize the warning signs of trouble. Get to a vet ASAP to ensure that you and your pet are not in danger. Had I let this go for a couple of more weeks, this vicious little parasite would have spread like crazy. It is extremely contagious
4. Find a good vet that knows reptiles. I am fortunate to live close to one of the finest veterinary schools in the country. Their quick diagnosis may prove to be critical in saving my collection.
5. Sanitation, sanitation, sanitation. This may prove to be the only thing that saves my collection. Always sanitize your hands tubs, bowls and instruments between feedings and handlings, especially if you have multiple corns.
6. FWIW, the vet professor took the time to educate me a little on crypto. Chlorine, iodine, and sodium based sanitizing agents have all proven to be ineffective again cryptosporidium in lab tests. Ammonia is one of the few proven winners.
I know this is long, but I thought it was important enough to share.
I recently acquired an '02 corn that started having feeding problems from day one. After eating on Monday, he immediately regurged. This was only his second feeding with me, and it was the second regurge. I got him into the vet teaching hospital at Texas A & M this morning to get checked out. The report is not good. Suspected cause: cryptosporidium.
I have been instructed to collect the regurge from this next feeding in order to confirm or deny the diagnosis. As you might expect, I am holding my breath. I hope that the test will confirm that it is only a simple parasitic infection and not crypto. With that said, if it is confirmed to be crypto, I will not hesitate for a second to destroy the animal in order to save the rest of my collection. My fingers are crossed that this is an isolated infection and I have caught it early before it spreads to other individuals.
Anyway, I thought that this would be a good time to do a little preaching. So here goes:
1. Although I take numerous precautions with sanitation, isolation and individual housing arrangements are critical! For those of you that insist on keeping multiple animals in the same enclosure, take note: If not for the precautionary practices that I have in place, I would be sitting here typing, knowing that I will likely lose thousands of dollars worth of snakes. I still may.
2. Don't assume away risk when buying an animal from anyone. Know who you are dealing with. Even if you trust them, take precautions like a quarantine to protect yourself. There is no doubt in my mind that this animal was sick when it arrived a few weeks ago. It was isolated, never fed successfully and so far is the only one with symptoms.
3. Educate yourself on your critters. Learn to recognize the warning signs of trouble. Get to a vet ASAP to ensure that you and your pet are not in danger. Had I let this go for a couple of more weeks, this vicious little parasite would have spread like crazy. It is extremely contagious
4. Find a good vet that knows reptiles. I am fortunate to live close to one of the finest veterinary schools in the country. Their quick diagnosis may prove to be critical in saving my collection.
5. Sanitation, sanitation, sanitation. This may prove to be the only thing that saves my collection. Always sanitize your hands tubs, bowls and instruments between feedings and handlings, especially if you have multiple corns.
6. FWIW, the vet professor took the time to educate me a little on crypto. Chlorine, iodine, and sodium based sanitizing agents have all proven to be ineffective again cryptosporidium in lab tests. Ammonia is one of the few proven winners.
I know this is long, but I thought it was important enough to share.
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