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-   -   Various Symptoms (http://www.fishkeepingbanter.com/showthread.php?t=9777)

dan-tucker December 29th 03 10:28 AM

Various Symptoms
 
Hi,

We own two goldfish and on Christmas Eve one of them seemed to fall ill
overnight. The head became swollen, the gills red inside, the dorsal fin was
flat to the body and the tail was clamped. The fish has very restricted
movement and often falls over onto it's side momentarily before righting
itself again.

We immediately moved it to some fresh water in a separate bowl, to which
there was a very slight improvement. We bought some swimbladder treatment
which we have administered with some aquarium salt but this has not helped
in the slightest. Now the tail is rotting and appears very ragged. The fish
will still eat if food is held sufficiently close for it to take

Does anyone have any suggestions please as from looking at the
www.goldfishinfo.com diagnostic guide it appears to be showing symptoms of
Gill Flukes, Clamped Fins, Tail Rot and Swim Bladder problems. I'm not sure
whether I am able to effectively treat the fish in it's current condition.

The other goldfish has been absolutely fine

Thanks in advance for any help received

dan...



Mel December 29th 03 11:46 AM

Various Symptoms
 
How long have you had the fish and have you introduced anything new to the
tank at all? Also, what size is the tank and what is your maintenance
schedule with it?
The very first thing you should do is test for ammonia, nitrite, and
nitrates in the original tank and the bowl the fish is in now. (Incidently a
bowl is not a good environment for a goldfish especially when he/she is
ill). If you don't have kits to test for this you can either buy them which
is a good investement, or take a sample of your water to your lfs who will
test it for you. Take a pen and paper and get the exact results and write
them down, then post them here. Don't take what the employee says as gospel
as their advise isn't always correct and they are more interested in making
money than the welfare of the fish in most cases.
Mel.



"dan-tucker" wrote in message
...
Hi,

We own two goldfish and on Christmas Eve one of them seemed to fall ill
overnight. The head became swollen, the gills red inside, the dorsal fin

was
flat to the body and the tail was clamped. The fish has very restricted
movement and often falls over onto it's side momentarily before righting
itself again.

We immediately moved it to some fresh water in a separate bowl, to which
there was a very slight improvement. We bought some swimbladder

treatment
which we have administered with some aquarium salt but this has not

helped
in the slightest. Now the tail is rotting and appears very ragged. The

fish
will still eat if food is held sufficiently close for it to take

Does anyone have any suggestions please as from looking at the
www.goldfishinfo.com diagnostic guide it appears to be showing symptoms

of
Gill Flukes, Clamped Fins, Tail Rot and Swim Bladder problems. I'm not

sure
whether I am able to effectively treat the fish in it's current

condition.

The other goldfish has been absolutely fine

Thanks in advance for any help received

dan...





dan-tucker December 29th 03 12:10 PM

Various Symptoms
 
Hi Mel, thanks for your reply.

I have had the fish for 2 years and nothing new has been introduced to the
tank recently. The tank is round, 24cm in diameter and 17cm high. I replace
the water with tap water that has been left out overnight, once every 10 to
14 days on average.

I do not own a test kit but will see if my local pet store will test some
water for me, so I can post some results.

In your experience, if the problem can be diagnosed and treated, is a fish
able to recover from the symptoms I described below? The tail is now very
badly rotten although the breathing and balance problems do not appear to
have worsened

Thanks
dan...

"Mel" wrote in message
...
How long have you had the fish and have you introduced anything new to

the
tank at all? Also, what size is the tank and what is your maintenance
schedule with it?
The very first thing you should do is test for ammonia, nitrite, and
nitrates in the original tank and the bowl the fish is in now. (Incidently

a
bowl is not a good environment for a goldfish especially when he/she is
ill). If you don't have kits to test for this you can either buy them

which
is a good investement, or take a sample of your water to your lfs who will
test it for you. Take a pen and paper and get the exact results and write
them down, then post them here. Don't take what the employee says as

gospel
as their advise isn't always correct and they are more interested in

making
money than the welfare of the fish in most cases.
Mel.



"dan-tucker" wrote in message
...
Hi,

We own two goldfish and on Christmas Eve one of them seemed to fall

ill
overnight. The head became swollen, the gills red inside, the dorsal

fin
was
flat to the body and the tail was clamped. The fish has very

restricted
movement and often falls over onto it's side momentarily before

righting
itself again.

We immediately moved it to some fresh water in a separate bowl, to

which
there was a very slight improvement. We bought some swimbladder

treatment
which we have administered with some aquarium salt but this has not

helped
in the slightest. Now the tail is rotting and appears very ragged. The

fish
will still eat if food is held sufficiently close for it to take

Does anyone have any suggestions please as from looking at the
www.goldfishinfo.com diagnostic guide it appears to be showing

symptoms
of
Gill Flukes, Clamped Fins, Tail Rot and Swim Bladder problems. I'm not

sure
whether I am able to effectively treat the fish in it's current

condition.

The other goldfish has been absolutely fine

Thanks in advance for any help received

dan...







Carlos December 29th 03 01:06 PM

Various Symptoms
 
You did correct in putting the fish into another tank to treat it.
Antibiotics will kill the bacteria in a comunity tank, bringing havoc.

Water pollution is the main concern for disease in fish. It brings about
everything into them. You did right in putting the fish out and with new
water, but this can also bring stress to the fish. Due to the many
conditions of this fish I will advise inmediate care with medications,

1. tail rot : can be bacterial or fungal, bacterial is just ragged fins,
fungal ragged fins and a white line around the edge, recommended treatment:
TC capsules for the first or Fungus cure for the last, both if it has both
and its not uncommon to see both at the same time.
2. gill disease : bacterial : fish are seen gasping and very red gills,
parasitic in addition to the above very small white gill worms can be seen,
if its bacterial NALA gram or EM tablets or Furan 2, parasitic I believe
there is no cure.
3. Clamped fins I believe is due to the tail and fin rot.
4. Swim bladder problems maybe due to the poor condition of this fish.

Advice and only if its in your heart (I read this in a book once and thank
God I never had to do it): If you see this fish with no response in a few
days or so, then and only then you should do euthanasia.

How to do it: Put the fish in a container with water, and placed it in the
freezer. The fish metabolism will slow down slowly and stop. The humane
thing about this is that the fish will not suffer, you will find it upright
and not in a contorted position.

I hope this helps.





"dan-tucker" wrote in message
...
Hi,

We own two goldfish and on Christmas Eve one of them seemed to fall ill
overnight. The head became swollen, the gills red inside, the dorsal fin

was
flat to the body and the tail was clamped. The fish has very restricted
movement and often falls over onto it's side momentarily before righting
itself again.

We immediately moved it to some fresh water in a separate bowl, to which
there was a very slight improvement. We bought some swimbladder treatment
which we have administered with some aquarium salt but this has not helped
in the slightest. Now the tail is rotting and appears very ragged. The

fish
will still eat if food is held sufficiently close for it to take

Does anyone have any suggestions please as from looking at the
www.goldfishinfo.com diagnostic guide it appears to be showing symptoms of
Gill Flukes, Clamped Fins, Tail Rot and Swim Bladder problems. I'm not

sure
whether I am able to effectively treat the fish in it's current condition.

The other goldfish has been absolutely fine

Thanks in advance for any help received

dan...





Toni December 29th 03 06:59 PM

Various Symptoms
 

"dan-tucker" wrote in message
...
Hi Mel, thanks for your reply.

I have had the fish for 2 years and nothing new has been introduced to the
tank recently. The tank is round, 24cm in diameter and 17cm high. I

replace
the water with tap water that has been left out overnight, once every 10

to
14 days on average.



I would recommend a *much* larger "tank" and much more frequent water
changes..

Not to be too critical, but that size container is no place for goldfish.
It's a miracle they've survived as long as they have.


--
Toni sigh...
http://www.cearbhaill.com/goldfish.htm



Mel December 29th 03 10:33 PM

Various Symptoms
 

Given the right conditions a goldfish can often make a miraculous recovery
even when they look in a really bad state so don't give up on him yet.
From what you've said I really think that your problem stems from poor
water quality. It sounds as if the fish are in severely cramped conditions
(each goldfish should have a minimum of 10 gallons of water each to stay
happy and healthy), and in conditions such as these the water quickly
becomes polluted, literally poisoning the fish. In an adequately sized tank,
because of the volume of water this doesn't happen as long as regular
partial water changes are carried out.
In a tank the size of yours it would be impossible to keep the water
quality perfect, but to try to improve things for the fish, start doing 50%
water changes (with temperature matched, dechlorinated water) daily in the
original tank and the bowl the sick fish is in. This will dilute any toxins
in the water. Buy yourself a gravel vacuum too (not very expensive) and
vacuum the gravel throughly each time you do a water change as this will
improve your water quality. If you try to get the water quality as perfect
as you can your fish will be much better prepared to fight their ailments.
Test for ammonia, nitrites and nitrates as suggested before as this will let
you know how your water quality really is. Ammonia should always be at 0,
nitrite at 0 and nitrate below 20. Anything above this isn't safe for the
fish.
I'd also add some salt (aquarium salt) to both tanks as this will make
things easier for the fish and help aid healing and stop infection. Adding
medications at the moment probably isn't a good idea as the water quality
should be your main concern and getting this right will probably improve
things no end anyway. Add the salt at a rate of 3 tablespoons per every 5
gallons of water and remember to replace the appropriate amount of salt with
each water change. So for example, if you remove and replace 5 gallons of
water, add another 3 tablespoons of salt. (Dissolve the salt in a little
tank water before adding).
If you don't have one already get a filter (a fluval one would be good) as
these really are a must with goldfish. You should aim to turn the volume of
your water over 8-10 times per hour)and add an airstone to add extra oxygen
too.
Mel.

"dan-tucker" wrote in message
...
Hi Mel, thanks for your reply.

I have had the fish for 2 years and nothing new has been introduced to

the
tank recently. The tank is round, 24cm in diameter and 17cm high. I

replace
the water with tap water that has been left out overnight, once every 10

to
14 days on average.

I do not own a test kit but will see if my local pet store will test

some
water for me, so I can post some results.

In your experience, if the problem can be diagnosed and treated, is a

fish
able to recover from the symptoms I described below? The tail is now

very
badly rotten although the breathing and balance problems do not appear

to
have worsened

Thanks
dan...

"Mel" wrote in message
...
How long have you had the fish and have you introduced anything new

to
the
tank at all? Also, what size is the tank and what is your maintenance
schedule with it?
The very first thing you should do is test for ammonia, nitrite, and
nitrates in the original tank and the bowl the fish is in now.

(Incidently
a
bowl is not a good environment for a goldfish especially when he/she

is
ill). If you don't have kits to test for this you can either buy them

which
is a good investement, or take a sample of your water to your lfs who

will
test it for you. Take a pen and paper and get the exact results and

write
them down, then post them here. Don't take what the employee says as

gospel
as their advise isn't always correct and they are more interested in

making
money than the welfare of the fish in most cases.
Mel.



"dan-tucker" wrote in message
...
Hi,

We own two goldfish and on Christmas Eve one of them seemed to

fall
ill
overnight. The head became swollen, the gills red inside, the

dorsal
fin
was
flat to the body and the tail was clamped. The fish has very

restricted
movement and often falls over onto it's side momentarily before

righting
itself again.

We immediately moved it to some fresh water in a separate bowl, to

which
there was a very slight improvement. We bought some swimbladder

treatment
which we have administered with some aquarium salt but this has

not
helped
in the slightest. Now the tail is rotting and appears very ragged.

The
fish
will still eat if food is held sufficiently close for it to take

Does anyone have any suggestions please as from looking at the
www.goldfishinfo.com diagnostic guide it appears to be showing

symptoms
of
Gill Flukes, Clamped Fins, Tail Rot and Swim Bladder problems. I'm

not
sure
whether I am able to effectively treat the fish in it's current

condition.

The other goldfish has been absolutely fine

Thanks in advance for any help received

dan...









[email protected] December 30th 03 01:02 AM

Various Symptoms
 
http://users.megapathdsl.net/~solo/p...htm#TUB_TO_TUB
move the fish to fresh water every day. add 1 teaspoon salt per 5 gallons, no
additives, dissolve first before adding fish. red gills are good, bright cherry red
is best. yes, it sounds like toxic water.
http://users.megapathdsl.net/~solo/puregold/home.html
Ingrid

"dan-tucker" wrote:

Hi,

We own two goldfish and on Christmas Eve one of them seemed to fall ill
overnight. The head became swollen, the gills red inside, the dorsal fin was
flat to the body and the tail was clamped. The fish has very restricted
movement and often falls over onto it's side momentarily before righting
itself again.

We immediately moved it to some fresh water in a separate bowl, to which
there was a very slight improvement. We bought some swimbladder treatment
which we have administered with some aquarium salt but this has not helped
in the slightest. Now the tail is rotting and appears very ragged. The fish
will still eat if food is held sufficiently close for it to take

Does anyone have any suggestions please as from looking at the
www.goldfishinfo.com diagnostic guide it appears to be showing symptoms of
Gill Flukes, Clamped Fins, Tail Rot and Swim Bladder problems. I'm not sure
whether I am able to effectively treat the fish in it's current condition.

The other goldfish has been absolutely fine

Thanks in advance for any help received

dan...




~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List
http://puregold.aquaria.net/
www.drsolo.com
Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other
compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the
endorsements or recommendations I make.

[email protected] December 30th 03 01:08 AM

Various Symptoms
 
95% of the time tail rot is due to crappy water conditions. especially if there is
no flashing which indicates a parasite of some kind.
healthy gills are bright cherry red.
98% of clamped fins is due to crappy water conditions.
authentic swim bladder problems are rare and are believed to be caused by toxic
crappy water problems and/or toxins destroying the head kidney.
dumping medications into the water without knowing what the real problem is (95% of
the time the problem is crappy water) simply adds toxic chemicals to water that is
already toxic which leads to dead fish faster than they would have without the
"medications". Most medications in the typical LFS are totally useless.
Ingrid

"Carlos" wrote:
1. tail rot :
2. gill disease : bacterial : fish are seen gasping and very red gills,
3. Clamped fins I believe is due to the tail and fin rot.
4. Swim bladder problems maybe due to the poor condition of this fish.




~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List
http://puregold.aquaria.net/
www.drsolo.com
Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other
compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the
endorsements or recommendations I make.

Azul December 30th 03 01:24 AM

Various Symptoms
 
On Mon, 29 Dec 2003 22:33:48 -0000, "Mel" wrote:


Given the right conditions a goldfish can often make a miraculous recovery
even when they look in a really bad state so don't give up on him yet.
From what you've said I really think that your problem stems from poor
water quality. It sounds as if the fish are in severely cramped conditions
(each goldfish should have a minimum of 10 gallons of water each to stay
happy and healthy), and in conditions such as these the water quickly
becomes polluted, literally poisoning the fish. In an adequately sized tank,
because of the volume of water this doesn't happen as long as regular
partial water changes are carried out.
In a tank the size of yours it would be impossible to keep the water
quality perfect, but to try to improve things for the fish, start doing 50%
water changes (with temperature matched, dechlorinated water) daily in the
original tank and the bowl the sick fish is in. This will dilute any toxins
in the water. Buy yourself a gravel vacuum too (not very expensive) and
vacuum the gravel throughly each time you do a water change as this will
improve your water quality. If you try to get the water quality as perfect
as you can your fish will be much better prepared to fight their ailments.
Test for ammonia, nitrites and nitrates as suggested before as this will let
you know how your water quality really is. Ammonia should always be at 0,
nitrite at 0 and nitrate below 20. Anything above this isn't safe for the
fish.
I'd also add some salt (aquarium salt) to both tanks as this will make
things easier for the fish and help aid healing and stop infection. Adding
medications at the moment probably isn't a good idea as the water quality
should be your main concern and getting this right will probably improve
things no end anyway. Add the salt at a rate of 3 tablespoons per every 5
gallons of water and remember to replace the appropriate amount of salt with
each water change. So for example, if you remove and replace 5 gallons of
water, add another 3 tablespoons of salt. (Dissolve the salt in a little
tank water before adding).
If you don't have one already get a filter (a fluval one would be good) as
these really are a must with goldfish. You should aim to turn the volume of
your water over 8-10 times per hour)and add an airstone to add extra oxygen
too.
Mel.

"dan-tucker" wrote in message
...
Hi Mel, thanks for your reply.

I have had the fish for 2 years and nothing new has been introduced to

the
tank recently. The tank is round, 24cm in diameter and 17cm high. I

replace
the water with tap water that has been left out overnight, once every 10

to
14 days on average.

I do not own a test kit but will see if my local pet store will test

some
water for me, so I can post some results.

In your experience, if the problem can be diagnosed and treated, is a

fish
able to recover from the symptoms I described below? The tail is now

very
badly rotten although the breathing and balance problems do not appear

to
have worsened

Thanks
dan...

"Mel" wrote in message
...
How long have you had the fish and have you introduced anything new

to
the
tank at all? Also, what size is the tank and what is your maintenance
schedule with it?
The very first thing you should do is test for ammonia, nitrite, and
nitrates in the original tank and the bowl the fish is in now.

(Incidently
a
bowl is not a good environment for a goldfish especially when he/she

is
ill). If you don't have kits to test for this you can either buy them

which
is a good investement, or take a sample of your water to your lfs who

will
test it for you. Take a pen and paper and get the exact results and

write
them down, then post them here. Don't take what the employee says as

gospel
as their advise isn't always correct and they are more interested in

making
money than the welfare of the fish in most cases.
Mel.



"dan-tucker" wrote in message
...
Hi,

We own two goldfish and on Christmas Eve one of them seemed to

fall
ill
overnight. The head became swollen, the gills red inside, the

dorsal
fin
was
flat to the body and the tail was clamped. The fish has very

restricted
movement and often falls over onto it's side momentarily before

righting
itself again.

We immediately moved it to some fresh water in a separate bowl, to

which
there was a very slight improvement. We bought some swimbladder
treatment
which we have administered with some aquarium salt but this has

not
helped
in the slightest. Now the tail is rotting and appears very ragged.

The
fish
will still eat if food is held sufficiently close for it to take

Does anyone have any suggestions please as from looking at the
www.goldfishinfo.com diagnostic guide it appears to be showing

symptoms
of
Gill Flukes, Clamped Fins, Tail Rot and Swim Bladder problems. I'm

not
sure
whether I am able to effectively treat the fish in it's current
condition.

The other goldfish has been absolutely fine

Thanks in advance for any help received

dan...









Azul

Azul December 30th 03 01:29 AM

Various Symptoms
 
On Mon, 29 Dec 2003 22:33:48 -0000, "Mel" wrote:

Add the salt at a rate of 3 tablespoons per every 5
gallons of water and remember to replace the appropriate amount of salt with
each water change. So for example, if you remove and replace 5 gallons of
water, add another 3 tablespoons of salt. (Dissolve the salt in a little
tank water before adding).


Hi Mel,

I believe that is too much salt. Here is a quote from Ingrid's
Puregold site.

"A solution of one teaspoon per gallon is 0.132% salt. So 1 tablespoon
per 5 gallons is around 0.1%
A LOW concentration is up to 0.1%. This concentration will not hurt
most plants and is what is typically used in ponds and tanks. Addition
to fresh water is done over 3 days."

Hope this helps everyone.



Azul


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