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#1
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Please help me.... I'm a relatively new fishkeeper and started off with a moor and oranda...the moor died within a week and had four white lumps on his body which i mistakingly took as ich.
My tank has been going for two months now and the oranda which i bought with the dead moor developed a huge white lump on its top fin (which had been clamped down for weeks) and after another huge lump started to develop on her side i spent an hour researching and put it down to NODULAR DISEASE and humanely disposed of the fish straight away so as to save the others. A week later.....my healthy-looking oranda has two small white lumps on its head. It's not cauliflower-like and matches the appearence of the lump on the dead oranda. This fish seems perfectly healthy! Water quality is good. There are left in my tank a moor, the oranda, a comet and normal goldfish and a chinese hillstream loach. ANY ADVICE WOULD BE VERY APPRECIATED! Thankyou |
#2
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I dont know what nodular disease is. never heard of it.
white lumps are most often 1. cool water, lymphocystis. a virus and actually a wart. cant be treated but not lethal either. or 2. epistylis a parasite thrives in poor quality warm water. treated with water changes. see http://www.mu.edu/~buxtoni/puregold/disease/disease.htm INgrid esandland wrote: Please help me.... I'm a relatively new fishkeeper and started off with a moor and oranda...the moor died within a week and had four white lumps on his body which i mistakingly took as ich. My tank has been going for two months now and the oranda which i bought with the dead moor developed a huge white lump on its top fin (which had been clamped down for weeks) and after another huge lump started to develop on her side i spent an hour researching and put it down to NODULAR DISEASE and humanely disposed of the fish straight away so as to save the others. A week later.....my healthy-looking oranda has two small white lumps on its head. It's not cauliflower-like and matches the appearence of the lump on the dead oranda. This fish seems perfectly healthy! Water quality is good. There are left in my tank a moor, the oranda, a comet and normal goldfish and a chinese hillstream loach. ANY ADVICE WOULD BE VERY APPRECIATED! Thankyou ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 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. |
#3
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I spent ages researching the symptoms and with the 'lump' not being cottonwool-like, but more like a cyst, Nodular disease was the only one that kept fitting the bill.
Below is the info I found.... Nodular disease Signs Of Infection White lumps or boils appear anywhere on the body. Details Of Infection Caused by Sporozoans, single celled spores that can multiply and spread rapidly. The spore's life cycle usually begins by ingestion to the intestinal tract by the fish. Here the spores infest the bloodstream penetrating internal organs before forming visible cysts and boils on the fish's body. When these boils rupture, millions of spores are released and so the cycle begins. Treatment Unfortunately chemical remedies are frequently ineffective and the only recourse is removal and humane disposal of the infected fish. Nodular disease Sporozoan infections cause cysts (containing the parasite) varying in size from pin-head to pea-size spots. They affect a wide variety of fish. Some affect the balance of fish they infect. ....Apparently the spores are found in tubifex worms...which i used as a feed Quote:
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#4
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OK.. checked with the expert, Jo Ann. yes, is rare but you are right about tubifex.
I think you need to confirm what it is. squeeze a nodule and put the material onto a glass slide and it resembles henneguya. or get a vet to do it. bloody material is even better, it moves thru the blood. if it really is sporozoans it is like this http://www.mu.edu/~buxtoni/puregold/...yxosporidiosis Ingrid esandland wrote: I spent ages researching the symptoms and with the 'lump' not being cottonwool-like, but more like a cyst, Nodular disease was the only one that kept fitting the bill. Below is the info I found.... Nodular disease Signs Of Infection White lumps or boils appear anywhere on the body. Details Of Infection Caused by Sporozoans, single celled spores that can multiply and spread rapidly. The spore's life cycle usually begins by ingestion to the intestinal tract by the fish. Here the spores infest the bloodstream penetrating internal organs before forming visible cysts and boils on the fish's body. When these boils rupture, millions of spores are released and so the cycle begins. Treatment Unfortunately chemical remedies are frequently ineffective and the only recourse is removal and humane disposal of the infected fish. Nodular disease Sporozoan infections cause cysts (containing the parasite) varying in size from pin-head to pea-size spots. They affect a wide variety of fish. Some affect the balance of fish they infect. ...Apparently the spores are found in tubifex worms...which i used as a feed Wrote: I dont know what nodular disease is. never heard of it. white lumps are most often 1. cool water, lymphocystis. a virus and actually a wart. cant be treated but not lethal either. or 2. epistylis a parasite thrives in poor quality warm water. treated with water changes. see http://www.mu.edu/~buxtoni/puregold/disease/disease.htm INgrid esandland wrote: - Please help me.... I'm a relatively new fishkeeper and started off with a moor and oranda...the moor died within a week and had four white lumps on his body which i mistakingly took as ich. My tank has been going for two months now and the oranda which i bought with the dead moor developed a huge white lump on its top fin (which had been clamped down for weeks) and after another huge lump started to develop on her side i spent an hour researching and put it down to NODULAR DISEASE and humanely disposed of the fish straight away so as to save the others. A week later.....my healthy-looking oranda has two small white lumps on its head. It's not cauliflower-like and matches the appearence of the lump on the dead oranda. This fish seems perfectly healthy! Water quality is good. There are left in my tank a moor, the oranda, a comet and normal goldfish and a chinese hillstream loach. ANY ADVICE WOULD BE VERY APPRECIATED! Thankyou- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 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. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 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. |
#6
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Eastland,
Let us look at this in the real world. There are six parasites that could be causing your problem. Myxosporulus is just one of them. It is rare and usually only affects eggs and fry. Unless you are feeding your fish live tubifex worms chances are this problem did not originate with tubifex worms. Freeze dried and frozen worms are all irradiated these days and if you read the packaging it usually states that, so unless you are feeding live worms chances are your fish didn't get it from the worms. At this point in time Ingrid, especially Jo Ann and you are just guessing as to what your fish have. In fact, it is possible that your fish could have TB, but that is very unlikely. There is also one other problem. You say that you water quality is good, but most nodular disease appearances are brought on by stress and poor water quality. It is very possible that you brought the disease home with you since you mention that the moor died not long after introduction the tank, which also suggests that you didn't quarantine you fish before adding them to you established home environment. So since by you own report you have not quarantined I would say that in no way tubifex worms were involved in any way, shape or form, especially considering that they are all now virtually eradiated as previously mentioned. How to the gills look. If they are whitish (which they probably would be for an advanced stage that will kill fish) it could possibly be "nodular disease," but you have to remember that is an imprecise diagnosis because you have no idea what parasite is bothering your fish. Also, your description of "nodular disease" leaves out the fact that it only advances fast at higher temperatures and you have never told what you keep the tank at. If there is no treatment, as you have stated, it would be prudent for you to dispose of you fish, sterilize the tank with bleach, and start over again. Again, the Expert Jo Ann is not totally right as speaking through Ingrid, for formaldehyde is only effective again parasites Apiosoma, Ribscyphidia and Ambiphrya and if Caprinianna is present only cooper treatments would be effective. So until you figure out what culprit you are dealing with you are shooting in the dark and formaldehyde is a pretty harsh treatment. Sorry I can not help you very much, but until you find out what is bothering your fish physically instead of looking problems on the internet, there is not much anyone can do for you, but guess. Tom L.L. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ wrote in message ... OK.. checked with the expert, Jo Ann. yes, is rare but you are right about tubifex. I think you need to confirm what it is. squeeze a nodule and put the material onto a glass slide and it resembles henneguya. or get a vet to do it. bloody material is even better, it moves thru the blood. if it really is sporozoans it is like this http://www.mu.edu/~buxtoni/puregold/...yxosporidiosis Ingrid esandland wrote: I spent ages researching the symptoms and with the 'lump' not being cottonwool-like, but more like a cyst, Nodular disease was the only one that kept fitting the bill. Below is the info I found.... Nodular disease Signs Of Infection White lumps or boils appear anywhere on the body. Details Of Infection Caused by Sporozoans, single celled spores that can multiply and spread rapidly. The spore's life cycle usually begins by ingestion to the intestinal tract by the fish. Here the spores infest the bloodstream penetrating internal organs before forming visible cysts and boils on the fish's body. When these boils rupture, millions of spores are released and so the cycle begins. Treatment Unfortunately chemical remedies are frequently ineffective and the only recourse is removal and humane disposal of the infected fish. Nodular disease Sporozoan infections cause cysts (containing the parasite) varying in size from pin-head to pea-size spots. They affect a wide variety of fish. Some affect the balance of fish they infect. ...Apparently the spores are found in tubifex worms...which i used as a feed Wrote: I dont know what nodular disease is. never heard of it. white lumps are most often 1. cool water, lymphocystis. a virus and actually a wart. cant be treated but not lethal either. or 2. epistylis a parasite thrives in poor quality warm water. treated with water changes. see http://www.mu.edu/~buxtoni/puregold/disease/disease.htm INgrid esandland wrote: - Please help me.... I'm a relatively new fishkeeper and started off with a moor and oranda...the moor died within a week and had four white lumps on his body which i mistakingly took as ich. My tank has been going for two months now and the oranda which i bought with the dead moor developed a huge white lump on its top fin (which had been clamped down for weeks) and after another huge lump started to develop on her side i spent an hour researching and put it down to NODULAR DISEASE and humanely disposed of the fish straight away so as to save the others. A week later.....my healthy-looking oranda has two small white lumps on its head. It's not cauliflower-like and matches the appearence of the lump on the dead oranda. This fish seems perfectly healthy! Water quality is good. There are left in my tank a moor, the oranda, a comet and normal goldfish and a chinese hillstream loach. ANY ADVICE WOULD BE VERY APPRECIATED! Thankyou- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 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. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 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. |
#7
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Hi Tom,
Thanks for taking the time to read through and reply. The dead oranda & moor were the first fish to be added to the tank after two weeks of having the tank up&running ready for them. I waited a further two weeks before adding another two fish...it's a 42l tank with a fluval 1 filter. The tank is at room temperature...but it is the living room so is warm during the evenings when I'm home. My fish have been rather stressed with me getting used to cleaning the tank properly and learning how to care for them properly..but the remaining ones all seem happy now and I'm no longer disturbing the water as much (I bought an algae-scrapper & siphon so that i only had to do partial water changes often, rather than full cleanouts). I find it more than coincidental that the only two fish i bought from a particular petshop are the ones to get get ill...the moor was in what i now recognise as 'bad shape' when i bought him! I couldn't tell if the gills on the oranda were 'whitish' because it was a white/silver fish with only red tail-tips. But....the fins had been firmly clamped down for several weeks & the fish had been darting frequently (showing obvious irritation) before the first big lump appeared on it's back & it was when a second, larger lump started to form taking up the entire belly of the fish that i took the decision to put it out of it's suffering. The fish now in the tank seem happy and healthy and so until symptoms (if any) present themselves, then I am not going to treat them for anything or take the drastic action of disposing of them. Thanks again for your advice. Quote:
Last edited by esandland : November 9th 04 at 08:24 PM. |
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