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eSHa 2000
I found the company's website - they sure do make a lot of claims for
the product, but give little clue as to what's in it. http://www.eshalabs.com/esha2000.htm There are 2 reviews from Practical Fishkeeping 1999, the first review says it looks like a neat product and it was real easy to dose by counting the drops and it colours the water green and we hope to find out if it works. The second review is about eSHa for dropsy - we left the fish untreated for a while, then we tried eSHa. The fish lived 6 weeks but died from we know not what. We hope to do a full treatment according to directions some day and find out if it works. Whew. And I though Melafix literature was vague. -- Mister Gardener |
eSHa 2000
Mr. Gardener wrote:
I found the company's website - they sure do make a lot of claims for the product, but give little clue as to what's in it. http://www.eshalabs.com/esha2000.htm There are 2 reviews from Practical Fishkeeping 1999, the first review says it looks like a neat product and it was real easy to dose by counting the drops and it colours the water green and we hope to find out if it works. The second review is about eSHa for dropsy - we left the fish untreated for a while, then we tried eSHa. The fish lived 6 weeks but died from we know not what. We hope to do a full treatment according to directions some day and find out if it works. Whew. And I though Melafix literature was vague. I looked too. Vague is right! The green is most likely malachite green. Anyone got a bottle with a UK or international patent number on it? -- Put the word aquaria in the subject to reply. Did you read the FAQ? http://faq.thekrib.com |
eSHa 2000
"Mr. Gardener" schrieb im Newsbeitrag ... I found the company's website - they sure do make a lot of claims for the product, but give little clue as to what's in it. http://www.eshalabs.com/esha2000.htm There are 2 reviews from Practical Fishkeeping 1999, the first review says it looks like a neat product and it was real easy to dose by counting the drops and it colours the water green and we hope to find out if it works. The second review is about eSHa for dropsy - we left the fish untreated for a while, then we tried eSHa. The fish lived 6 weeks but died from we know not what. We hope to do a full treatment according to directions some day and find out if it works. Whew. And I though Melafix literature was vague. -- Mister Gardener Hello, Due to a German website, this product contains: (1) 6.3 mg Ethacridine lactate, (2) 3.2 mg Copper ++, (3) 0.26 mg Methyl orange, (4) 1 mg Proflavin. This means it is a multifunctiol product. Be careful if you have certain plants because of (1), (2), or if you have snails, shrimps because of (2). Regards Juergen |
eSHa 2000
On Thu, 30 Mar 2006 18:22:02 +0200, Jürgen Beisser
wrote: Due to a German website, this product contains: (1) 6.3 mg Ethacridine lactate, (2) 3.2 mg Copper ++, (3) 0.26 mg Methyl orange, (4) 1 mg Proflavin. This means it is a multifunctiol product. Be careful if you have certain plants because of (1), (2), or if you have snails, shrimps because of (2). Regards Juergen Thanks! -- Mister Gardener |
eSHa 2000
Jürgen Beisser wrote:
] Due to a German website, this product contains: (1) 6.3 mg Ethacridine lactate, (2) 3.2 mg Copper ++, (3) 0.26 mg Methyl orange, (4) 1 mg Proflavin. This means it is a multifunctiol product. Be careful if you have certain plants because of (1), (2), or if you have snails, shrimps because of (2). Yeah - that should kill plants, inverts, and just about anything on the surface of a fish. I wonder what the methyl orange is for? -- Put the word aquaria in the subject to reply. Did you read the FAQ? http://faq.thekrib.com |
eSHa 2000
On Thu, 30 Mar 2006 17:53:55 GMT, Altum wrote:
Due to a German website, this product contains: (1) 6.3 mg Ethacridine lactate, (2) 3.2 mg Copper ++, (3) 0.26 mg Methyl orange, (4) 1 mg Proflavin. This means it is a multifunctiol product. Be careful if you have certain plants because of (1), (2), or if you have snails, shrimps because of (2). Yeah - that should kill plants, inverts, and just about anything on the surface of a fish. I wonder what the methyl orange is for? I really have a lot of praise for this product in that it has helped my fish with all sorts - but it hasn't hurt my plants, or (as far as I could tell) the filter - it says it won't - or in fact my catfish / loaches (I split the daily dose in two and gave half twice a day in that case). I too would love to know what's in it, because it seems to be all I need unless there is something specific (like eye fluke) which needs specific treatment. It is a sort of browny colour - almost blood red like iron. I've scanned the leaflet, it's very crumpled (sorry!) but if anyone is interested this is what it says in the packaging: http://www.gorge.org/fish/esha2000.pdf Hope that's some help? -- Flash Wilson - Web Design & Mastery - 0870 401 4061 / 07939 579090 -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- Work: www.wdam.co.uk Personal: www.gorge.org |
eSHa 2000
Flash Wilson wrote:
On Thu, 30 Mar 2006 17:53:55 GMT, Altum wrote: Due to a German website, this product contains: (1) 6.3 mg Ethacridine lactate, (2) 3.2 mg Copper ++, (3) 0.26 mg Methyl orange, (4) 1 mg Proflavin. This means it is a multifunctiol product. Be careful if you have certain plants because of (1), (2), or if you have snails, shrimps because of (2). Yeah - that should kill plants, inverts, and just about anything on the surface of a fish. I wonder what the methyl orange is for? I really have a lot of praise for this product in that it has helped my fish with all sorts - but it hasn't hurt my plants, or (as far as I could tell) the filter - it says it won't - or in fact my catfish / loaches (I split the daily dose in two and gave half twice a day in that case). I too would love to know what's in it, because it seems to be all I need unless there is something specific (like eye fluke) which needs specific treatment. It is a sort of browny colour - almost blood red like iron. I've scanned the leaflet, it's very crumpled (sorry!) but if anyone is interested this is what it says in the packaging: http://www.gorge.org/fish/esha2000.pdf Hope that's some help? It seems to claim to do almost everything from reading the leaflet....I'm also curious as to what is in there... Gill |
eSHa 2000
Gill Passman wrote:
Flash Wilson wrote: On Thu, 30 Mar 2006 17:53:55 GMT, Altum wrote: Jürgen Beisser wrote: Due to a German website, this product contains: (1) 6.3 mg Ethacridine lactate, (2) 3.2 mg Copper ++, (3) 0.26 mg Methyl orange, (4) 1 mg Proflavin. This means it is a multifunctiol product. Be careful if you have certain plants because of (1), (2), or if you have snails, shrimps because of (2). I too would love to know what's in it, because it seems to be all I need unless there is something specific (like eye fluke) which needs specific treatment. It is a sort of browny colour - almost blood red like iron. I've scanned the leaflet, it's very crumpled (sorry!) but if anyone is interested this is what it says in the packaging: http://www.gorge.org/fish/esha2000.pdf Hope that's some help? It seems to claim to do almost everything from reading the leaflet....I'm also curious as to what is in there... Since Jürgen already posted the ingredients, I assume you want more explanation? 1) Ethacridine lactate, marked in the 1920s as Rivanol, is an antibacterial acridine. It is sometimes used to treat shigella. 2) Proflavin is another acridine that is very closely related to acriflavin. It's good for killing protozoans like velvet, gram positive bacteria, and fungus. 3) Copper is also good for killing protozoans like ich and velvet. Works best but is most toxic to fish in soft water. 4) Methyl orange, good for??? It's normally used as a pH indicator in aquarium alkalinity test kits. I've never seen it mentioned as a fish medicine. This is an antibiotic-free "scattershot" medicine, and it is reasonable to try it for anything in the leaflet. It will have the strongest action against protozoans like velvet, tetrahymena, and possibly ich. I assume by blocking NTD they mean that it kills free-swimming parasites. It would not stop transmission from scavenging infected corpses. I wouldn't expect much for dropsy - these compounds don't penetrate tissue every well so they wouldn't get inside the fish. TetraMedica General Tonic is a similar mixture of acridines with methylene blue and no copper. If you don't like copper, it's a good choice. As for plants, proflavin must be safer. Acriflavine (a mixture of acriflavin and proflavin) kills them quite effectively. The methylene blue in the Tetra medicine also kills plants, but it's a pretty good antifungal and antibacterial. -- Put the word aquaria in the subject to reply. Did you read the FAQ? http://faq.thekrib.com |
eSHa 2000
On Fri, 31 Mar 2006 18:34:22 GMT, Altum
wrote: Gill Passman wrote: Flash Wilson wrote: On Thu, 30 Mar 2006 17:53:55 GMT, Altum wrote: Jürgen Beisser wrote: Due to a German website, this product contains: (1) 6.3 mg Ethacridine lactate, (2) 3.2 mg Copper ++, (3) 0.26 mg Methyl orange, (4) 1 mg Proflavin. This means it is a multifunctiol product. Be careful if you have certain plants because of (1), (2), or if you have snails, shrimps because of (2). I too would love to know what's in it, because it seems to be all I need unless there is something specific (like eye fluke) which needs specific treatment. It is a sort of browny colour - almost blood red like iron. I've scanned the leaflet, it's very crumpled (sorry!) but if anyone is interested this is what it says in the packaging: http://www.gorge.org/fish/esha2000.pdf Hope that's some help? It seems to claim to do almost everything from reading the leaflet....I'm also curious as to what is in there... Since Jürgen already posted the ingredients, I assume you want more explanation? 1) Ethacridine lactate, marked in the 1920s as Rivanol, is an antibacterial acridine. It is sometimes used to treat shigella. 2) Proflavin is another acridine that is very closely related to acriflavin. It's good for killing protozoans like velvet, gram positive bacteria, and fungus. 3) Copper is also good for killing protozoans like ich and velvet. Works best but is most toxic to fish in soft water. 4) Methyl orange, good for??? It's normally used as a pH indicator in aquarium alkalinity test kits. I've never seen it mentioned as a fish medicine. This is an antibiotic-free "scattershot" medicine, and it is reasonable to try it for anything in the leaflet. It will have the strongest action against protozoans like velvet, tetrahymena, and possibly ich. I assume by blocking NTD they mean that it kills free-swimming parasites. It would not stop transmission from scavenging infected corpses. I wouldn't expect much for dropsy - these compounds don't penetrate tissue every well so they wouldn't get inside the fish. TetraMedica General Tonic is a similar mixture of acridines with methylene blue and no copper. If you don't like copper, it's a good choice. As for plants, proflavin must be safer. Acriflavine (a mixture of acriflavin and proflavin) kills them quite effectively. The methylene blue in the Tetra medicine also kills plants, but it's a pretty good antifungal and antibacterial. You would be disappointed if I didn't ask: Is it compatible with Mela/Pimafix? -- Mister Gardener |
eSHa 2000
Mister Gardener wrote:
You would be disappointed if I didn't ask: Is it compatible with Mela/Pimafix? Beats the heck outta me. I don't mix meds unless I can find a reliable reference from a vet. -- Put the word aquaria in the subject to reply. Did you read the FAQ? http://faq.thekrib.com |
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