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Tettra developped large black snout
Hi,
One of my old Tettra's developped a large black swelling in its nose. only one has it, but I'm pretty sure its from the last few days although I cant be 100% sure... i've tried photographing it but its about hard without adequete lighting... here's the link if you can make anything out of it : http://www.liort.com/temp/fish_nose.jpg would appreciate any help. LT |
Lior T wrote:
Hi, One of my old Tettra's developped a large black swelling in its nose. only one has it, but I'm pretty sure its from the last few days although I cant be 100% sure... i've tried photographing it but its about hard without adequete lighting... here's the link if you can make anything out of it : http://www.liort.com/temp/fish_nose.jpg would appreciate any help. LT Looks like a lymphocystis viral growth, an injury, or the start of a Columnaris infection. Both of those often start at the mouth. I think it looks more like lymphocystis. Lymphocystis is a viral disease that can cause tumor-like growths on fish. There is no cure, but the virus and associated tumor often goes away on its own. It can take a month or more for lymphocystis to clear. If you have a quarantine tank, move the fish there because it will be shedding virii. Supposedly 3 hour acriflavine baths every few days will help clear lymphocystis and will certainly help with Columnaris or secondeary infections. Treat in a separate container - a clean bowl or dish with an airstone is fine for 3 hours. Acriflavin stains so don't use your favorite Ttpperware. Watch for signs of Columnaris in case I'm wrong. Those are white, fluffy finrot, white patches on the body, and reddened fin bases. If that happens, feed antibiotic food and put kanamycin in the water immediately. If the fish refuses food, add furanace to the water as well IF the fish is in quarantine. Furanace is bad for biological filters. If you don't have a hospital, do not allow the fish to die in your display tank. You must euthanize a lymphocystis-infected fish if it looks close to death to keep the disease from spreading. Sheesh...yet another way long post. I gotta work on that old disease FAQ some more. ;-) -- Elaine T __ http://eethomp.com/fish.html '__ rec.aquaria.* FAQ http://faq.thekrib.com |
Uzytkownik "Elaine T" napisal w wiadomosci ... Lior T wrote: Hi, One of my old Tettra's developped a large black swelling in its nose. only one has it, but I'm pretty sure its from the last few days although I cant be 100% sure... i've tried photographing it but its about hard without adequete lighting... here's the link if you can make anything out of it : http://www.liort.com/temp/fish_nose.jpg would appreciate any help. LT Looks like a lymphocystis viral growth, an injury, or the start of a Columnaris infection. Both of those often start at the mouth. I think it looks more like lymphocystis. Lymphocystis is a viral disease that can cause tumor-like growths on fish. There is no cure, but the virus and associated tumor often goes away on its own. It can take a month or more for lymphocystis to clear. If you have a quarantine tank, move the fish there because it will be shedding virii. Supposedly 3 hour acriflavine baths every few days will help clear lymphocystis and will certainly help with Columnaris or secondeary infections. Treat in a separate container - a clean bowl or dish with an airstone is fine for 3 hours. Acriflavin stains so don't use your favorite Ttpperware. Watch for signs of Columnaris in case I'm wrong. Those are white, fluffy finrot, white patches on the body, and reddened fin bases. If that happens, feed antibiotic food and put kanamycin in the water immediately. If the fish refuses food, add furanace to the water as well IF the fish is in quarantine. Furanace is bad for biological filters. If you don't have a hospital, do not allow the fish to die in your display tank. You must euthanize a lymphocystis-infected fish if it looks close to death to keep the disease from spreading. Sheesh...yet another way long post. I gotta work on that old disease FAQ some more. ;-) -- Elaine T __ http://eethomp.com/fish.html '__ rec.aquaria.* FAQ http://faq.thekrib.com You must be able to cut and paste a lot of your excellent work in these ad hoc disease articles into your FAQ. Uncle Davey |
hehe, yeh long post but very informative ! thanks !
I dont have a hospital tank, I might be able to get a decent bowl... metalin-blue will do any help ? thanks LT -------------------- Elaine T wrote: Lior T wrote: Hi, One of my old Tettra's developped a large black swelling in its nose. only one has it, but I'm pretty sure its from the last few days although I cant be 100% sure... i've tried photographing it but its about hard without adequete lighting... here's the link if you can make anything out of it : http://www.liort.com/temp/fish_nose.jpg would appreciate any help. LT Looks like a lymphocystis viral growth, an injury, or the start of a Columnaris infection. Both of those often start at the mouth. I think it looks more like lymphocystis. Lymphocystis is a viral disease that can cause tumor-like growths on fish. There is no cure, but the virus and associated tumor often goes away on its own. It can take a month or more for lymphocystis to clear. If you have a quarantine tank, move the fish there because it will be shedding virii. Supposedly 3 hour acriflavine baths every few days will help clear lymphocystis and will certainly help with Columnaris or secondeary infections. Treat in a separate container - a clean bowl or dish with an airstone is fine for 3 hours. Acriflavin stains so don't use your favorite Ttpperware. Watch for signs of Columnaris in case I'm wrong. Those are white, fluffy finrot, white patches on the body, and reddened fin bases. If that happens, feed antibiotic food and put kanamycin in the water immediately. If the fish refuses food, add furanace to the water as well IF the fish is in quarantine. Furanace is bad for biological filters. If you don't have a hospital, do not allow the fish to die in your display tank. You must euthanize a lymphocystis-infected fish if it looks close to death to keep the disease from spreading. Sheesh...yet another way long post. I gotta work on that old disease FAQ some more. ;-) |
Lior T wrote:
hehe, yeh long post but very informative ! thanks ! I dont have a hospital tank, I might be able to get a decent bowl... metalin-blue will do any help ? thanks LT You're welcome. A decent bowl will work fine for quarantine as long as it's warm enough and you contol ammonia and nitrite. If you run a cheap air-driven sponge filter in your tank for a week, you'll have a cycled filter good enough for one tetra, or you could use something like Prime and water changes. Methylene blue won't do much. It's good for fungus but not columnaris or viruses. It's also good for killing plants and filter bacteria. :-( -- Elaine T __ http://eethomp.com/fish.html '__ rec.aquaria.* FAQ http://faq.thekrib.com |
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