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#11
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Greetings, Nikki. I was wondering if you would get that MBD girl on CL. Glad you did. It was a bit too far a drive for us.
Below is a brief desciption of a similar rescued female cham we have. We rescued a couple of panther chams in early August. They were housed together and the female was forced to dwell in the bottom area of the cage, deep inside a very leafy plant. She did not have access to UVB or basking. She had a broken mishapen leg, a festered wound on the side of her head, the other side of her casque is slightly crushed, 2 grossly mal-aligned eyes, a cratered scar on her side, weak grip, and could not extend her tongue. Instead of moving her eyes to see she would move her head. Here is the link to the posting: Sad Tale of 2 chams Housed Together ![]() I should update with new info and photos. We put her on prescription calcium, and reptile rescue food, and gutloaded crickets. The crickets were also supplemented on a schedule. She was placed in a small cage with lots of horizontal support and short leafy plants for cushion and humidity retention. We initially fed her by holding her head in one hand and offering food via rubber coated tongs with the other hand. She would site with one eye, and then just flail her head to try to get the food. It brought tears to my eyes. She would get so excited about seeing the food! I would hold it in front of her and eventually she would calm down enough to open her mouth and she would place the front edge of her tongue right by her teeth and I would place the food on her tongue. She could hardly even use her tongue to mash or "chew" so I would have to wait very patiently while she ate, before giving her the next serving. It would take about 20 minutes to feed her 3 crickets (or the equivalent in rescue food). In fact, I think the first few meals we had to force feed her, by us opening her mouth and placing food in it. She can now shoot her tongue (thought she misses the target), but she cup fed successfully a few weeks ago. It was so taxing for her, however, that I don't make her do it regularly. She can sight food, but has difficulty focusing on a single target. It is still hit or miss. Her grip is strong and she climbs around quite a bit, gripping with all 4 feet. She loves her mister and sits under it very relaxed. She also will come forward in her cage when she "sees" me. Caring for her has been a very gratifying experience. From my experience I would say it is likely her tongue and eye will improve. Both are likely related to nutritional needs. Also, we had an older adult female veiled with the long yellowish nails. I think it is a sign of age perhaps.
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http://www.chameleonsnorthwest.com 360-893-6207 Last edited by gesang; 10-04-2008 at 08:02 PM.. |
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#12
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Quote:
In fact, we had a cool spell here (temps in the 60s in August) when we brought home the little rescue girl that I just posted about here. So I placed her cage outside, with a basking lamp plugged into an outdoor socket. She got some natural UVB and stayed warm enough, too. We regularly placed her outside to help with her recovery.
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http://www.chameleonsnorthwest.com 360-893-6207 |
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#13
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She has never laid and is very large. Like, very rotund.
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1.1 Jacksons 1.2 Ambilobes 1.0 Sambava 1.0 Carpet 0.2 Veileds 1.1 Fischers |
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#14
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Hey all- I just got home and am beat. I work early in the morning and unfortunately do not have the time right now to reply to everyone directly. I will be back tomorrow and will do my best to reply to every post you have left- I appreciate all the input- please keep it coming! The chams seem to be doing fine- I will try to get them outside when it is not too windy or raining. I am just trying to get them hydrated right now- I will also do this outside with my big pump mister. I am letting them adjust and will try feeding them tomorrow.
In the meantime, any photo requests? Certain angles, close ups, etc? Please let me know if it will help you help me. Thank you so much again. I really appreciate all of the help and I hope I can do well by these chams and get them healthy.
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1.1 Jacksons 1.2 Ambilobes 1.0 Sambava 1.0 Carpet 0.2 Veileds 1.1 Fischers |
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#15
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Hey all,
Both girls got some quality time with proper basking and UVB lights today (and yesterday! But alas, no sun here in Portland-just rain and wind). They seem to be doing better than the night I got them even. Veiled 1 was found under her basking bulb this morning, soaking up the heat. I have been doing pretty well to get them re hydrated- both had some big orange poos (no obvious parasites right now- I will dose with Panacur once they are obviously well enough for it.) It has been somewhat difficult to get them to drink without flooding the cages so I just pop them, cage and all, into my bathtub and mist them with warm water from one of these: http://www.jccarpet.com/janitorial/images/standard.gif I got both to drink for a while and I really focused on their eyes (especially veiled 1's) to get them to squish around a bit and clean them. I fed them both for the first time today. Veiled one at half a snow pea (I had to use it to get her to start eating and then slip the insects in until she crunched them down) 6-7 medium silkworms and something like 5-6 large gutloaded crickets. She got calcium with d3 on three silkworms, vitamins on one cricket, and regular calcium on three crickets. Do you think that is okay for her first feeding? I am trying to get her enough calcium to halt the MBD and hopefully get her back on track and developing bones. Her jaw is rather floppy and you can tell that she has moderate MBD. I haven't given her any preformed vitamin A yet and I think it will be the most important supplement for her at this point because of her eyes. She really seemed to enjoy eating the bugs and I even saw the tip of her tongue a couple of times but it never came up much. She would realize she had the bug in her mouth and then crunch it a bit and gulp it down. I am going to pop a vitamin E capsule and rub some into her burn, probably about once a week. Does that sound like a good plan? I plan to get both chams outside as soon as possible- it just needs to quit raining. One last thing about Thing 1 before we move onto Thing 2. She has a tiny black tip on her tail- necrotic, I presume. I will take some photos and post in a bit. What should I do about it? Antibiotic ointment? Anything? Removal at the vet? Okay, cham 2 ate 16 total crickets (that is what I get for telling the girlfriend to feed her while I was at work) dusted with calcium today and her tongue is working fine. I plan on cutting her off at about 8 large feeder insects a day and then less once she is in better shape. Does that sound about right or should I let her eat her fill? I just don't want to complicate things with an infertile clutch of eggs since she has already had like...three clutches so far? Two or three, anyway. Please give me some feedback and let me know if I am doing this correctly. How would you do it? What should I be doing? What should I be looking for? Thanks guys. I couldn't do this without you and this forum.
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1.1 Jacksons 1.2 Ambilobes 1.0 Sambava 1.0 Carpet 0.2 Veileds 1.1 Fischers |
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#16
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Quote:
I remember reading this post. I am glad your panther rescue is doing better. I will take your advice and use you as a model for this situation. I want to get them both outside for some natural rays and I will as soon as the weather is a bit less...cold and wet. I will probably also set up outside basking lamps for them as it is a bit chilly. What are the best feeders right now? I am using crickets and silkies but will be out of silkworms soon and honestly, they are a bit expensive. I am trying to get roaches breeding but it will be a little while. What kind of things did you gutload with? I am using a "superfood" I make- about 20 pounds of fruit and veggies (off the top of my head...kale, collard greens, carrots, a whole butternut squash, a big thing of blueberries, maybe a little broccoli, spirulina, apples, limes and some other fruits and veggies I can't think of right now) blended up, portioned out and frozen. I pop a cube of this in with my feeders (the roaches love it, especially and the crickets are seen eating it) along with a dry mix (sometimes mixed in to the superfood) containing wheat germ, nutritional yeast, bee pollen, probiotics (acidopholus) and some added calcium. I also put a chunk of veggie in there for water such as zucchini, a slice of squash, apple or whatever I have, really. Is this enough for gutloading? I also got a leaf of prickly pear and am going to put chunks in for the next little bit and see if it is any good. I work at a health food coop and am able to get pretty much anything. What should I get? I was thinking sweet potato and hemp seed nuts next. (hemp seed nuts have all of the Omega fatty acids along with vitamins A and E and high protein) I may try filing her nails on the sides a little and at least evening them out and sharpening them- they seem a bit cumbersome and there was no way for her to wear them down. Do you think that would be okay? I won't take length off- just excess protuberance. ....on a side note, I hope to see you at the Puyallup show- I may not make it but am really really trying to (I need frozen feeder mice and am always in the market for supplies)
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1.1 Jacksons 1.2 Ambilobes 1.0 Sambava 1.0 Carpet 0.2 Veileds 1.1 Fischers |
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#17
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Why bother doing anything to her nails? Its likely going to stress her out and if you take the point off the ends she may not be able to grip the branches.
Remember that excess preformed vitamin A can interfere with the D3 and cause MBD. There are liquid calciums that are supposed to be more easily absorbed than the powders...calcium sandoz and calcium gluconate....they might help the calcium levels quicker. Be careful with them though...they are syrupy and difficult to swallow. Have you thought about taking them to a vet to have some tests done and treatments necessary for any nutrients that are out of balance? |
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#18
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Quote:
I know that too much vitamin A is dangerous- I did a tiny dab on a cricket and fed it to her a bit ago- it was a very, very small amount- the amount I give my chams monthly. I will see if I can get some liquid calcium- do I have to go through a vet or is there a way to get it now? Thanks for the input- you always have something useful to say
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1.1 Jacksons 1.2 Ambilobes 1.0 Sambava 1.0 Carpet 0.2 Veileds 1.1 Fischers |
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#19
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Quote:
![]() About her nails- they are not pointy right now. They are very long, dark yellow, a bit flaky and have a blunt end. I wanted to give them a sharp end (as they should be) so that she could grip better as she seems to have problems holding on to branches. Advice?
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1.1 Jacksons 1.2 Ambilobes 1.0 Sambava 1.0 Carpet 0.2 Veileds 1.1 Fischers |
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#20
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You should be able to get the liquid calcium at a pharmacy.
It could be the MBD making her grip weak that is stopping her from holding on to the branches. Calcium levels affect the muscles. I still think filing them will be quite stressful. For an old chameleon that has trouble gripping, I often take a piece of bark and put it in the cage on an angle but so that the chameleon can still get up near the top but has less trouble gripping. It should work for this one too. I also have suggested that people with chameleons with MBD put them in shorter cages so that there is less distance to fall and less chance of injury until the bones are strong again. |
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