linear UVB
...basking spot is around 80.
...one or two year old panther cham...
now both eyes are usually shut, one still opens regularly.
yesterday i used "turtle eye drops."
...get terramycin drops for cows from the farm store? and dilute it?
Howdy,
Many keepers often discover that "eye problems" aren't eye problems at all. Think of a chameleon closing their eye(s) more like a human wincing (winc•ing: To shrink or start involuntarily, as in pain or distress). He may be expressing his overall health condition rather than something as specific as an eye infection. An eye infection is still a possibility but it may be leading you away from the real underlying problem. Looking at the husbandry fundamentals is the first order of business. Things that I'm wondering about are:
He's "one or two years-old". How long has he been in your care?
The exact mfgr/make/model of your UVB linear tube.
Unanswered from the questions link:
Feeding - What are you feeding your cham? What amount? What is the schedule? How are you gut-loading your feeders?
Supplements - What brand and type of calcium and vitamin products are you dusting your feeders with and what is the schedule?
Watering - What kind of watering technique do you use? How often and how long to you mist? Do you see your chameleon drinking?
Fecal Description - Briefly note colors and consistency from recent droppings. Has this chameleon ever been tested for parasites?
"His basking spot is around 80." That seems a bit on the low side. More insightful is how warm is his body getting while at that basking spot. A typical adult Panther or Veiled will often continue to bask with a skin/body temp of 90F-100F as measured using an infrared digital temp "gun" measuring the skin an in away. It is just as important to insure that your chameleon gets up to full operating temp as it is being sure that he can't get burned while basking. A quick way to check the basking area is to stick the back of your hand there for a minute. Your hand should feel pleasantly warm and not painfully hot. At least you'll know that you are in the ballpark of basking temps.
The Turtle Eye Drops address the eye problems that some turtles get because of a vitamin A deficiency: (
Zoo Med Repti Turtle Eye Drops) "Use gentle, effective Repti Turtle Eye Drops to open and clean inflamed eyes, and as a preventative for eye diseases caused by Vitamin A deficiency. " Vitamin A may be an issue with your chameleon but there are many other sources of health issues to eliminate first.
The Terramycin drops may or may not be called for as mentioned above. You'll have to sort-out the dilution issues if you choose to use the "cow" drops.
PHOTOS! Photos will go a long way to help sorting out his enclosure issues. Photos of him and close-ups of the eye would be useful too.