dinomom
Chameleon Enthusiast
Last month Angela Lennox DVM from Avian and Exotic Animal Clinic of Indianapolis was visiting and I wanted her to have a look at my Meller's mouth, he has always had some irregularities in the lip line.
Previously I had found a small pocket of infection, cleaned and treated it, and it has resolved completely.
First we took rads to see if there were any lesions in the bone where the teeth sit. The first one is the teeth which look normal. We also got a full body which is interesting..she said unless there are females with eggs on board they are "empty". All you can see on Pellinore is some food product in the stomach, the kidneys are back in the hip girdle between those bones. Not seeing liver or kidneys is good as they only become enlarged when they are problematic.
Then she worked on the mouth. Shockingly, there was yellow tartar along several of the teeth!! She said they are seeing this more often in Bearded Dragons, and it must have something to do with what we are feeding. They actually do dentals on beardies! You can see it easily in the pic, it looks soft but is actually hard.
This can be treated by rubbing on a chlorhexidrine gel:
If I had to make a guess, it could be the dubias we feed with their mushy parts. So I am trying to go more towards flying insects and silkworms.
I would love to hear anyone else's feedback or experiences, and if anyone can get pics of their cham's mouth.
Previously I had found a small pocket of infection, cleaned and treated it, and it has resolved completely.
First we took rads to see if there were any lesions in the bone where the teeth sit. The first one is the teeth which look normal. We also got a full body which is interesting..she said unless there are females with eggs on board they are "empty". All you can see on Pellinore is some food product in the stomach, the kidneys are back in the hip girdle between those bones. Not seeing liver or kidneys is good as they only become enlarged when they are problematic.
Then she worked on the mouth. Shockingly, there was yellow tartar along several of the teeth!! She said they are seeing this more often in Bearded Dragons, and it must have something to do with what we are feeding. They actually do dentals on beardies! You can see it easily in the pic, it looks soft but is actually hard.
This can be treated by rubbing on a chlorhexidrine gel:
Bright Bark & Meow Tooth Gel
This can eventually make it go away and will keep bacteria from forming.If I had to make a guess, it could be the dubias we feed with their mushy parts. So I am trying to go more towards flying insects and silkworms.
I would love to hear anyone else's feedback or experiences, and if anyone can get pics of their cham's mouth.