Purplesmurf
New Member
The best course of treatment with ick is raising the water temperature to 85-86 degrees and using a salt (3 tsp. per gallon) / Quickcure (malachite green/formaldehyde) combination.
The salt enables your fish to remain bouyant with minimal work while not over stressing them, it may also adversly affect the ich parasite as its immune system is not nearly as protecting.
The trouble with meds is that that ich parasite is only vulnerable to them during one of it's three stages of life.
Ich is introduced in fish in its adult form(it can only be introduced to a tank, it not always present as some people believe). The adult form of ich (attached to your fish) will detach (trophozoite / breeding stage of life) and produce cysts. Each cyst can give rise to 300 or so tomites (free floating, only form vulnerable to medications). As the parasite matures (take 3 days) it attaches itself to a fish's body and will burrow into and under the scales.
Raising the temperature of your tank will accelerate the parasites life cycle and minimize the time infected fish will have parasites attached. The medication will kill any parasites in the water column, and will exterminate the ich burrowed into your fish after they mature into the trophozite stage of life and re-enter the water column.
But there an important thing to remember about medication: disregard the instructions on the bottle, but take note of the dose amount. The bottles will often only have you treat once every twelve days, obvioulsy this will only kill the tomites in the water column at the time of treatment. All the adult parasites on/in your fish will still have a chance to produce more cysts and re-infect your tank. So instead of using one course of treatment you should 3-4 within a 12 day period (the length of the ich parasite life cycle). Make sure to do at least a 50% water change between treatments.
Peas help unclog your fish's digestive tract. Along with garlic extract (boil from garlic in water and dip your fish's food in it) they can be used to help rid your fish of internal parasites and the garlic also intices picky or sick fish to eat.
I hope that helps.
The salt enables your fish to remain bouyant with minimal work while not over stressing them, it may also adversly affect the ich parasite as its immune system is not nearly as protecting.
The trouble with meds is that that ich parasite is only vulnerable to them during one of it's three stages of life.
Ich is introduced in fish in its adult form(it can only be introduced to a tank, it not always present as some people believe). The adult form of ich (attached to your fish) will detach (trophozoite / breeding stage of life) and produce cysts. Each cyst can give rise to 300 or so tomites (free floating, only form vulnerable to medications). As the parasite matures (take 3 days) it attaches itself to a fish's body and will burrow into and under the scales.
Raising the temperature of your tank will accelerate the parasites life cycle and minimize the time infected fish will have parasites attached. The medication will kill any parasites in the water column, and will exterminate the ich burrowed into your fish after they mature into the trophozite stage of life and re-enter the water column.
But there an important thing to remember about medication: disregard the instructions on the bottle, but take note of the dose amount. The bottles will often only have you treat once every twelve days, obvioulsy this will only kill the tomites in the water column at the time of treatment. All the adult parasites on/in your fish will still have a chance to produce more cysts and re-infect your tank. So instead of using one course of treatment you should 3-4 within a 12 day period (the length of the ich parasite life cycle). Make sure to do at least a 50% water change between treatments.
Peas help unclog your fish's digestive tract. Along with garlic extract (boil from garlic in water and dip your fish's food in it) they can be used to help rid your fish of internal parasites and the garlic also intices picky or sick fish to eat.
I hope that helps.