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Thank you for your input. If it's a fungal infection, is there anything you
can do to help the fish? It's still alive after 2 days of this, and I hate to just "remove" it if there's any help at all. The water tests fine and no other symptom is present. Thank you. dc wrote: does anyone know what causes a fish to swim in circles with it's nose to the bottom? obviously it's in distress, in fact I'm sure it's dying, but is there any danger to my other fish? Is this contagious? Help--this is my first tank. What you are seeing is a symptom which could potentially have many causes. An advanced internal F. columnaris bacterial infection can cause this symptom. Do you see any large whitish patches on or just beneath the fish's flesh? This disease is not really communicable, but the poor living conditions required for an infection to take place are common so the disease may affect more than one fish. Fungal infections, such as Ichthyophoniasis, can cause this symptom as well. Do you see any darkening of the skin, does the flesh look rough, or does the fish appear to be emaciated? A variety of internal parasites that damage muscle or nerve tissue can cause this symptom as well. Ichthyophoniasis is communicable as are most parasites. I could have been ammonia poisoning. Ammonia (not ammonium) is capable of crossing the blood-brain barrier to destroy nerve tissue. For lack of any other symptom it could have been something like a stroke, or just the last desperate struggle of a weak fish near death. If you cannot observe any other symptoms besides the crippled swimming pattern your best bet is to test your water quality... even if there are other symptoms that would be a good place to start anyway. If this is your first tank and it is still rather new my first suspect is ammonia poisoning. If your tank tests clean then I would suggest removing the dying fish to reduce the possible treat of transmission of any unknown pathogens. Many parasites and internal fungal infections are believed to be transmitted through injection of infected tissue. -- Message posted via PetKB.com http://www.petkb.com/Uwe/Forums.aspx...water/200609/1 |
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