FblthpTheLost
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My axolotl is named Fblthp (Fb for short). My girlfriend and I have had her for a little more than two years, since she was a baby.
First, I apologize for the excessive length of this post, but it has been a really chaotic roller-coaster of events, and I want to detail everything that's happened because her symptoms have been so all-over-the-place that I have no idea what steps to take. Second, here are some important details before getting into my predicament:
Tank:
The tank she is living in right now is 40 gallons, with a 40-gallon filter. She has been living in this tank for three or four months; before then, she lived in a 20-gallon tank since she was only a couple weeks old (we got her when she was only about two inches long). Her current tank (the 40-gal. one) is bare-bottom, but her previous one (20 gal.) had fine substrate. I did not learn until much later that substrate was a bad idea, but as far as I could ever tell it never seemed to bother her. The substrate's individual little pieces never exceeded 1-2mm in diameter, and when she was really little (smaller than six inches long) we fed her in a separate container, anyway. She has several live plants in her tank along with a few different places to hide.
Water Parameters:
For the 2+ years I've had her, her water has always tested well, or close to it. We cycled the tank before we got her; when we moved her to the new tank three months ago, we kept all her original water from the first tank, and even let her original 20-gal. filter run alongside the 40-gal. one in the new tank for about a month or two. The old filter still sits in the new tank, but it doesn't run. The water we've always used for her is well water from our tap. We test with API's Freshwater Master Test Kit.
The pH usually varies from 6.0-6.5, which I understand is slightly too low. (Their ideal, from what I've researched, is 7.0 to 7.5)
Ammonia is always 0 ppm
Nitrites are always 0 ppm
Nitrates are usually 5.0 ppm, which is also what the water straight out of the tap tests at. (I have read that anything under 20ppm is acceptable with regular water changes)
Temperature is usually 64 Fahrenheit, but sometimes drops as low as 50 in winter months. The AC is always keeping the room she is in cool, when necessary, and except for when we first got her I have never seen the temperature rise higher than 66 on a bad day.
Her water is changed once a week, usually around 25-40%
Diet:
When she was young, we fed her blood worm cubes. After she reached about 6 in. long, we switched to nightcrawlers and pellets (Invert Aquatics Soft Pellets, specifically for salamanders). She is typically fed either one nightcrawler or three pellets every three days, which I have found consistently keeps her tummy about as wide as the widest part of her head. Pellets and nightcrawlers are all she has been fed over the past year and a half.
Now, on to my problem...
About two weeks ago, my girlfriend and I noticed that Fb became a lot less active and her overall 'posture' declined; she of course has the dopey "drag-my-whole-body-around" posture that most other adult axies seem to, but she had become unable to lift herself from the floor of her tank. Whereas before only the biggest part of her tummy would hit the floor of her tank when she walked, it now looked like her whole body was almost being "pushed against," or weighed-down into, the ground.
I gave her a tea bath, but when I placed her back in the tank, she sank right to the bottom, even flipping around onto her back for a second or two. This frightened me, as I've never seen her do that before. I decided to fridge her, assuming that maybe she just was constipated. Our fridge is far too cold (almost 20 Fahrenheit), so instead of fridging her the normal way, we froze several water bottles, filled a cooler with a small reservoir of water, then put two glass tupperware containers in the cooler, also filled with water, to house the axolotl. (We used two at a time to accommodate water changes; keep her in one while the other, with fresh water, can get down to a matching temp.) We put two frozen water bottles at a time into the reservoir, and changed them every 3-4 hours. Using this method, the temperature fluctuated between 38F at the very coldest, and around 50F at the absolute hottest (but 90% of the time it was exactly 42F).
Fridging made no difference, so we scheduled an appointment with a vet who specializes in herpetology, and on Aug 23--one week ago--we took her. It was an hour-long trip, one way, and we did our best to pack her and keep her cool. The vet gave her an ultrasound, discovering that she has a mild case of hydrocoelom, which I believe is water retention. We were given an antibiotic to give her orally every day for two weeks. The vet had given her her first dose that day.
When we first brought her home from the vet and back into her tank, she immediately sank to the bottom and just sat where she landed (which was on her porcelain food plate). Her posture was the same, still looking heavy and dragging every part of her underbelly around. We wanted to give her time to de-stress in her tank, but that night we resumed fridging (when fridging her/unfridging her, we gradually allow her water to cool, by the way--we never moved her instantly between great temperature differences). That same night, she had defecated a small amount (the first time in a week), and so we thought we were on the right track.
Whenever I would change her water over the following week (starting after Aug. 24th), I noticed white fluffy clumps floating in it. I thought this was her shedding her slime coat due to stress at first, so I didn't think too much of it (we figured she'd start getting stressed, after all). At this point, she did not have any white clumps on her body, so I didn't think it was fungus or anything.
As the days progressed, her swelling resumed. It had stayed about the same, and hadn't increased or decreased. We gave her her meds the first day (Aug. 24) by removing her from her tub onto a wet dish and gently wrestling it into her mouth. We took extra precautions not to hurt her but it took several minutes to get the medicine into her mouth. We later discovered that she had spit a lot of it up. The next day (Aug. 25), we found a new method of wrapping her in a moistened washcloth to administer her meds. We found the method on this forum, and followed it the best we could--the washcloth we used was kept moistened in the second tub in her cooler, had never been washed with bleach, and we ran boiling water over it each time before we used it with her. (Note: the boiling was done 24 hours before using it with the axolotl--the washcloth had plenty of time to cool and match her cooler temp before we wrapped her in it. I know that might go without saying, but I want to make it perfectly clear that we did NOT wrap our axolotl up in a boiling-hot washcloth.) Also, we wear powderless vinyl gloves whenever we handle her now, which we rinse before use.
This method did work, but I believe it stressed her out a lot. On Aug. 25, she spit up a lot of her meds again, so on Aug. 26, when we used the wrapping method again, I gently stuck the syringe a bit farther into her mouth (approx. 1-1.5 inches deep) to try and squirt her medicine directly into her throat. She did not seem to like this at all, and laid very still when we unwrapped her from the washcloth. She swam a bit when we placed her back in the tub, though, so I thought that maybe she was just scared. When I checked on her again about half an hour later (around 8:30 p.m.), I was met with another shock.
At first, I thought she had died. She was curled up and when I lifted her, she felt very stiff. She barely reacted to my holding her, and I could feel her entire slime coat had shed. She also felt colder than usual, even though her temp still read 42F. It felt like she was tensing every part of her little body. Eventually, she did move, but it was very slight. Just kind of moving her arms/legs. I didn't know what else to do, so I just waited out the night, and then contacted the vet the next morning. She did not spit any of the medicine up as far as I could tell, but I did find a clumpy, clear residue floating atop the water. It was like one roughly circular, connected clear film. I can only assume that this was a part of her slime coat, because it didn't really look like her previously spit-up medicine.
By the next morning (Aug. 27), Fb was a lot better. She still felt kind of stiff, and her slime coat was still shoddy, but she was moving more and was more responsive. Still, I contacted the vet, and--on her advice--decided to stop the medication and simply monitor Fb's behavior for the time being, fearing that the meds are over-stressing her. I kept her fridged, with daily water changes, and gradually her condition seemed to improve. However, the next day (Aug. 28), we actually saw fungus growing on her. It was white-gray clumps, attached to her head and feet and some parts of her body.
After doing some research, we decided the best thing to do would be to unfridge her. I've read conflicting reports on whether or not fridging is good or bad for fungus, but since she had been fridged for close to a week, I thought that at the very least it would help with her stress. The night of Aug. 28 I gave her a salt bath (again, following guides on this forum). The next morning, I gave her another bath, and a subsequent one that night, 12 hours later. That was yesterday; today, I've given her her morning salt bath, but have yet to give her her night time one.
But here is the part that is really confusing to me.
Her posture has improved tremendously. She no longer drags her tummy everywhere, and is very easily holding herself up. She's incredibly responsive again, and--at least insofar as her behavior is concerned--is like her old self. She's even swimming around (at least, as much as she can in her tub). Her slime coat also seems to have at least partially returned, because she's slippery again (unlike when I found her super stiff on Aug. 26).
Her rear end is floating now, and her legs are lopsided (one tends to jut right up almost out of the water while the other drags on the ground). She can still move them, however, and they aren't always poking up like this. She is showing all the signs of constipation/impaction, but fridging is supposed to be a remedy for that; she had been fridged for a week and only defecated once right at the beginning. Her swelling has barely gone down, as well.
Furthermore, I have tried feeding her a single pellet numerous times every day for the past week. She has yet to show any interest in them (I give her around half an hour to eat them per attempt). She hasn't eaten since a few days before the vet, and even then, she only ate two of the three pellets we put in front of her.
As of writing this, her fungal infection (at least, as far as I can see) has mostly gone away. There is way less cloudy stuff in her water when I do changes now, and I expect that by tomorrow or the next day at the very latest there won't be any, so I want to drop down to a single salt bath for at least a few days to make sure we get it all. I also want to start giving her a daily tea bath in order to further soothe her skin.
(One more thing. We noticed right around when a lot of this started that the container her most recent batch of worms was living in had a small amount of white-looking mold growing in the dirt, toward the bottom. It is my fear that, maybe, she ate a worm that had eaten some of that fungus or whatever it is, and now has an internal infection that's blocking up her system. She hasn't eaten any worms since that one.)
So I guess I'm just asking for any kind of advice or input. I'm really at my wit's end with how to help her. My instinct is to put her back on her antibiotic once she's off her salt baths and is feeling less stressed. I also want to return her to her tank, to further help her stress levels. I've done two 50% water changes in her tank (one yesterday, one the day before) to ensure that any gunk in there that could have caused this is gone. I haven't cleaned any of her tank decor or plants, but I want to do that before putting her back in.
And, of course, I am going to check in with the vet once more to get her input.
If you have read this far, I just want to say thanks. If I've been making a lot of terrible decisions with taking care of Fblthp, just know it isn't intentional. Everything I do with Fb is the result of extensive research (ever since I found out how dangerous substrate can be, I'm paranoid constantly that I'm not doing the best for her). She has almost never shown any sign of stress or unhappiness--even now (besides the shedding of her slime coat). When we first changed her tank, she swam really frantically for a couple of days, but eventually calmed down. We also got her a new, big hide and that seemed to ease her. I have only seen her tilt her gills forward twice in her life. Once was the day we brought her back from the vet after the long trip, and the second was over a year ago, and I don't even remember what caused it. We did a water change and fed her, and they went back to normal the next day.
She normally swims around a lot in the early morning/night time (when there's less light), but never in such a way that I thought she was panicking or trying to escape harmful conditions. Her gills always look healthy, as does her body. Everyone at the vet's office complimented how good she looked, and everything on her physical exam came back normal except for her coelom/muskuloskeletal system (i.e. the water retention). This is the first time she has ever shown severe symptoms of anything. She has otherwise been a perfectly happy, active axolotl for the 2+ years I've had her.
Once more, I'm sorry that this was such a long post. There's just been a lot that's happened, and I didn't want to leave anything out that might be important.
Thank you again for reading this, and if you can think of anything or have any input at all, please don't be afraid to respond.
First, I apologize for the excessive length of this post, but it has been a really chaotic roller-coaster of events, and I want to detail everything that's happened because her symptoms have been so all-over-the-place that I have no idea what steps to take. Second, here are some important details before getting into my predicament:
Tank:
The tank she is living in right now is 40 gallons, with a 40-gallon filter. She has been living in this tank for three or four months; before then, she lived in a 20-gallon tank since she was only a couple weeks old (we got her when she was only about two inches long). Her current tank (the 40-gal. one) is bare-bottom, but her previous one (20 gal.) had fine substrate. I did not learn until much later that substrate was a bad idea, but as far as I could ever tell it never seemed to bother her. The substrate's individual little pieces never exceeded 1-2mm in diameter, and when she was really little (smaller than six inches long) we fed her in a separate container, anyway. She has several live plants in her tank along with a few different places to hide.
Water Parameters:
For the 2+ years I've had her, her water has always tested well, or close to it. We cycled the tank before we got her; when we moved her to the new tank three months ago, we kept all her original water from the first tank, and even let her original 20-gal. filter run alongside the 40-gal. one in the new tank for about a month or two. The old filter still sits in the new tank, but it doesn't run. The water we've always used for her is well water from our tap. We test with API's Freshwater Master Test Kit.
The pH usually varies from 6.0-6.5, which I understand is slightly too low. (Their ideal, from what I've researched, is 7.0 to 7.5)
Ammonia is always 0 ppm
Nitrites are always 0 ppm
Nitrates are usually 5.0 ppm, which is also what the water straight out of the tap tests at. (I have read that anything under 20ppm is acceptable with regular water changes)
Temperature is usually 64 Fahrenheit, but sometimes drops as low as 50 in winter months. The AC is always keeping the room she is in cool, when necessary, and except for when we first got her I have never seen the temperature rise higher than 66 on a bad day.
Her water is changed once a week, usually around 25-40%
Diet:
When she was young, we fed her blood worm cubes. After she reached about 6 in. long, we switched to nightcrawlers and pellets (Invert Aquatics Soft Pellets, specifically for salamanders). She is typically fed either one nightcrawler or three pellets every three days, which I have found consistently keeps her tummy about as wide as the widest part of her head. Pellets and nightcrawlers are all she has been fed over the past year and a half.
Now, on to my problem...
About two weeks ago, my girlfriend and I noticed that Fb became a lot less active and her overall 'posture' declined; she of course has the dopey "drag-my-whole-body-around" posture that most other adult axies seem to, but she had become unable to lift herself from the floor of her tank. Whereas before only the biggest part of her tummy would hit the floor of her tank when she walked, it now looked like her whole body was almost being "pushed against," or weighed-down into, the ground.
I gave her a tea bath, but when I placed her back in the tank, she sank right to the bottom, even flipping around onto her back for a second or two. This frightened me, as I've never seen her do that before. I decided to fridge her, assuming that maybe she just was constipated. Our fridge is far too cold (almost 20 Fahrenheit), so instead of fridging her the normal way, we froze several water bottles, filled a cooler with a small reservoir of water, then put two glass tupperware containers in the cooler, also filled with water, to house the axolotl. (We used two at a time to accommodate water changes; keep her in one while the other, with fresh water, can get down to a matching temp.) We put two frozen water bottles at a time into the reservoir, and changed them every 3-4 hours. Using this method, the temperature fluctuated between 38F at the very coldest, and around 50F at the absolute hottest (but 90% of the time it was exactly 42F).
Fridging made no difference, so we scheduled an appointment with a vet who specializes in herpetology, and on Aug 23--one week ago--we took her. It was an hour-long trip, one way, and we did our best to pack her and keep her cool. The vet gave her an ultrasound, discovering that she has a mild case of hydrocoelom, which I believe is water retention. We were given an antibiotic to give her orally every day for two weeks. The vet had given her her first dose that day.
When we first brought her home from the vet and back into her tank, she immediately sank to the bottom and just sat where she landed (which was on her porcelain food plate). Her posture was the same, still looking heavy and dragging every part of her underbelly around. We wanted to give her time to de-stress in her tank, but that night we resumed fridging (when fridging her/unfridging her, we gradually allow her water to cool, by the way--we never moved her instantly between great temperature differences). That same night, she had defecated a small amount (the first time in a week), and so we thought we were on the right track.
Whenever I would change her water over the following week (starting after Aug. 24th), I noticed white fluffy clumps floating in it. I thought this was her shedding her slime coat due to stress at first, so I didn't think too much of it (we figured she'd start getting stressed, after all). At this point, she did not have any white clumps on her body, so I didn't think it was fungus or anything.
As the days progressed, her swelling resumed. It had stayed about the same, and hadn't increased or decreased. We gave her her meds the first day (Aug. 24) by removing her from her tub onto a wet dish and gently wrestling it into her mouth. We took extra precautions not to hurt her but it took several minutes to get the medicine into her mouth. We later discovered that she had spit a lot of it up. The next day (Aug. 25), we found a new method of wrapping her in a moistened washcloth to administer her meds. We found the method on this forum, and followed it the best we could--the washcloth we used was kept moistened in the second tub in her cooler, had never been washed with bleach, and we ran boiling water over it each time before we used it with her. (Note: the boiling was done 24 hours before using it with the axolotl--the washcloth had plenty of time to cool and match her cooler temp before we wrapped her in it. I know that might go without saying, but I want to make it perfectly clear that we did NOT wrap our axolotl up in a boiling-hot washcloth.) Also, we wear powderless vinyl gloves whenever we handle her now, which we rinse before use.
This method did work, but I believe it stressed her out a lot. On Aug. 25, she spit up a lot of her meds again, so on Aug. 26, when we used the wrapping method again, I gently stuck the syringe a bit farther into her mouth (approx. 1-1.5 inches deep) to try and squirt her medicine directly into her throat. She did not seem to like this at all, and laid very still when we unwrapped her from the washcloth. She swam a bit when we placed her back in the tub, though, so I thought that maybe she was just scared. When I checked on her again about half an hour later (around 8:30 p.m.), I was met with another shock.
At first, I thought she had died. She was curled up and when I lifted her, she felt very stiff. She barely reacted to my holding her, and I could feel her entire slime coat had shed. She also felt colder than usual, even though her temp still read 42F. It felt like she was tensing every part of her little body. Eventually, she did move, but it was very slight. Just kind of moving her arms/legs. I didn't know what else to do, so I just waited out the night, and then contacted the vet the next morning. She did not spit any of the medicine up as far as I could tell, but I did find a clumpy, clear residue floating atop the water. It was like one roughly circular, connected clear film. I can only assume that this was a part of her slime coat, because it didn't really look like her previously spit-up medicine.
By the next morning (Aug. 27), Fb was a lot better. She still felt kind of stiff, and her slime coat was still shoddy, but she was moving more and was more responsive. Still, I contacted the vet, and--on her advice--decided to stop the medication and simply monitor Fb's behavior for the time being, fearing that the meds are over-stressing her. I kept her fridged, with daily water changes, and gradually her condition seemed to improve. However, the next day (Aug. 28), we actually saw fungus growing on her. It was white-gray clumps, attached to her head and feet and some parts of her body.
After doing some research, we decided the best thing to do would be to unfridge her. I've read conflicting reports on whether or not fridging is good or bad for fungus, but since she had been fridged for close to a week, I thought that at the very least it would help with her stress. The night of Aug. 28 I gave her a salt bath (again, following guides on this forum). The next morning, I gave her another bath, and a subsequent one that night, 12 hours later. That was yesterday; today, I've given her her morning salt bath, but have yet to give her her night time one.
But here is the part that is really confusing to me.
Her posture has improved tremendously. She no longer drags her tummy everywhere, and is very easily holding herself up. She's incredibly responsive again, and--at least insofar as her behavior is concerned--is like her old self. She's even swimming around (at least, as much as she can in her tub). Her slime coat also seems to have at least partially returned, because she's slippery again (unlike when I found her super stiff on Aug. 26).
Her rear end is floating now, and her legs are lopsided (one tends to jut right up almost out of the water while the other drags on the ground). She can still move them, however, and they aren't always poking up like this. She is showing all the signs of constipation/impaction, but fridging is supposed to be a remedy for that; she had been fridged for a week and only defecated once right at the beginning. Her swelling has barely gone down, as well.
Furthermore, I have tried feeding her a single pellet numerous times every day for the past week. She has yet to show any interest in them (I give her around half an hour to eat them per attempt). She hasn't eaten since a few days before the vet, and even then, she only ate two of the three pellets we put in front of her.
As of writing this, her fungal infection (at least, as far as I can see) has mostly gone away. There is way less cloudy stuff in her water when I do changes now, and I expect that by tomorrow or the next day at the very latest there won't be any, so I want to drop down to a single salt bath for at least a few days to make sure we get it all. I also want to start giving her a daily tea bath in order to further soothe her skin.
(One more thing. We noticed right around when a lot of this started that the container her most recent batch of worms was living in had a small amount of white-looking mold growing in the dirt, toward the bottom. It is my fear that, maybe, she ate a worm that had eaten some of that fungus or whatever it is, and now has an internal infection that's blocking up her system. She hasn't eaten any worms since that one.)
So I guess I'm just asking for any kind of advice or input. I'm really at my wit's end with how to help her. My instinct is to put her back on her antibiotic once she's off her salt baths and is feeling less stressed. I also want to return her to her tank, to further help her stress levels. I've done two 50% water changes in her tank (one yesterday, one the day before) to ensure that any gunk in there that could have caused this is gone. I haven't cleaned any of her tank decor or plants, but I want to do that before putting her back in.
And, of course, I am going to check in with the vet once more to get her input.
If you have read this far, I just want to say thanks. If I've been making a lot of terrible decisions with taking care of Fblthp, just know it isn't intentional. Everything I do with Fb is the result of extensive research (ever since I found out how dangerous substrate can be, I'm paranoid constantly that I'm not doing the best for her). She has almost never shown any sign of stress or unhappiness--even now (besides the shedding of her slime coat). When we first changed her tank, she swam really frantically for a couple of days, but eventually calmed down. We also got her a new, big hide and that seemed to ease her. I have only seen her tilt her gills forward twice in her life. Once was the day we brought her back from the vet after the long trip, and the second was over a year ago, and I don't even remember what caused it. We did a water change and fed her, and they went back to normal the next day.
She normally swims around a lot in the early morning/night time (when there's less light), but never in such a way that I thought she was panicking or trying to escape harmful conditions. Her gills always look healthy, as does her body. Everyone at the vet's office complimented how good she looked, and everything on her physical exam came back normal except for her coelom/muskuloskeletal system (i.e. the water retention). This is the first time she has ever shown severe symptoms of anything. She has otherwise been a perfectly happy, active axolotl for the 2+ years I've had her.
Once more, I'm sorry that this was such a long post. There's just been a lot that's happened, and I didn't want to leave anything out that might be important.
Thank you again for reading this, and if you can think of anything or have any input at all, please don't be afraid to respond.