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Weird Behaviour During Treatment Help

To me it looks like it is being irritated by something on it's body.
 
You ideally need to get a skin scrape from the fish to identify what kind of parasite is irritating it so you can apply the correct treatment.
 
Sterazin by WaterLife is the best treatment to stop flashing but cannot be used until 4 or 5 days after dosing Myaxin. 
 
Generally, flashing is not deadly unless the fish, when rubbing itself to relieve irritation, produces an skin breakage OR if the parasite moves into the gills and destroys them.
 
 
My advise would be to
- Place the fish that is flashing into a separate aquarium so that you can treat it with Sterazin. 
- Continue treating the main tank with Myaxin
- Feed your other fish in the main tank a high vitamin C/protein diet in the hope that this will allow their immune system to withstand the same parasite irritation.
 
Okay I will Thankyou for the help, what would you say the best vitamin food is I tend to Feed
Tubifex bloodworm and flakes

Edit: I also fed garlic soaked food and he stopped flashing for a few days but then started again today
 
Nutrafin fish food tend to be high in vitamins (especially vitamin C). Alternatively, you can soak your existing food in WaterLife Vitazin.
 
If the cotton-wool spreads you will need to think about:
 
- Placing the infected fish into a QT aquarium and use a sedative to calm them down (the sedative is known as Koi Calm, as supplied with the NTLabs Paramedic Kit: http://www.ntlabs.co.uk/products/Paramedic-Kit.html ).
- When the fish is sedated, remove the cotton growth very carefully, if it is attached loosely, with tweezers;
- Apply malachite green topically to the wound to kill the fungus/bacteria
- Apply wound seal to stop infections getting into the wound (wound seal can be found here: http://www.ntlabs.co.uk/products/Wound-Seal.html )
 
 
Edit: The garlic that you fed may have helped as parasites swim away from it. It isn't recognised as a treatment as far as I know though.
 
Thanks!
Will grab some of the Vitazin and sterazin
My guppies have died now , it spreads so quickly
My platy has white poo aswell stringy sometimes solid so would the sterazin work for that type of parasite or would I need to get something different
I've heard protozin is good?
 
Borngemini said:
Thanks!
Will grab some of the Vitazin and sterazin
My guppies have died now , it spreads so quickly
My platy has white poo aswell stringy sometimes solid so would the sterazin work for that type of parasite or would I need to get something different
I've heard protozin is good?
 
Parasites can cause a layer of the fishes intestine to slough off and exit through the anal orifice; it usually appears has white faeces. Parasites such as hexamita can cause this sloughing to happen.
 
Generally, to reduce a parasite infestation you will need to rely on formaldehyde treatment. Assuming the parasites have caused an internal bacterial infection, you will need to also apply malachite green. Both malachite green and formaldehyde are within Sterazin.
 
I believe Protozin is used for white-spot and fungal infections so it would not be appropriate for the 'white poo' symptom. If malachite green and formaldehyde are within Protozin, I would use it but the most recently produced Protozin chemical no longer contains this combination.
 
I'm sorry to hear of your fish loss. It happens to all of us at some point!
 
Okay thanks will defo be getting some of that I'm not sure on waterlife though that myxazin didn't seem to help the cotton wool
 
Borngemini said:
Okay thanks will defo be getting some of that I'm not sure on waterlife though that myxazin didn't seem to help the cotton wool
 
I can't really evaluate WaterLife in terms of Myxazin because I've never had to use it.
 
I can say with certainty that Waterlife protozin and sterazin are highly effective products however. Sterazin will likely resolve the white faeces issue but myxazin will perhaps not cure the cotton wool alone; as previously discussed, I'd definitely consider removal of the cotton wool and then employing a topical treatment of the cotton wool growth spot (there will most likely be a wound) followed by use of wound seal. An open wound is an invitation to fungus/bacteria/parasites to re-infect the site if it is not treated and sealed and also causes the fish to suffer osmotic shock due to the fact that the water column has a different salinity level to that of it's bodily cells.
 
mark4785 said:
Okay thanks will defo be getting some of that I'm not sure on waterlife though that myxazin didn't seem to help the cotton wool
 
I can't really evaluate WaterLife in terms of Myxazin because I've never had to use it.
 
I can say with certainty that Waterlife protozin and sterazin are highly effective products however. Sterazin will likely resolve the white faeces issue but myxazin will perhaps not cure the cotton wool alone; as previously discussed, I'd definitely consider removal of the cotton wool and then employing a topical treatment of the cotton wool growth spot (there will most likely be a wound) followed by use of wound seal. An open wound is an invitation to fungus/bacteria/parasites to re-infect the site if it is not treated and sealed and also causes the fish to suffer osmotic shock due to the fact that the water column has a different salinity level to that of it's bodily cells.
Okay, :) and to get a scrude of skin to see what parasite it is I can do that with that kio carp then add the wound healer where I did it?
 
Borngemini said:
 

Okay thanks will defo be getting some of that I'm not sure on waterlife though that myxazin didn't seem to help the cotton wool
 
I can't really evaluate WaterLife in terms of Myxazin because I've never had to use it.
 
I can say with certainty that Waterlife protozin and sterazin are highly effective products however. Sterazin will likely resolve the white faeces issue but myxazin will perhaps not cure the cotton wool alone; as previously discussed, I'd definitely consider removal of the cotton wool and then employing a topical treatment of the cotton wool growth spot (there will most likely be a wound) followed by use of wound seal. An open wound is an invitation to fungus/bacteria/parasites to re-infect the site if it is not treated and sealed and also causes the fish to suffer osmotic shock due to the fact that the water column has a different salinity level to that of it's bodily cells.
Okay,
yay.gif
) and to get a scrude of skin to see what parasite it is I can do that with that kio carp then add the wound healer where I did it?
 
 
You ideally need to sedate the fish as indicated in my 2nd reply. This is to make the fish unaware that you are handling it so that it doesn't die from stress. A sedative agent can be bought here: http://www.ntlabs.co.uk/products/Koi-Calm.html . You usually add the sedative agent to a bucket of water or isolation tank (not into your main tank) and wait for the fish to lose it's balance and have a slowed gill movement. It goes without saying that the bucket/isolation tank should have dechlorinated water with a temperature that is the same as the main tank (don't use the main tank water just incase fungal spores are in it). Once it loses its balances you need to transfer it to a separate bucket/tank that does not have any sedating agent in but which does have good oxygenation (i.e. a oxygen bubbler). You will need to handle the fish for the following steps so be sure to pass water continually over the gills while it is out of the water.
 
You'd then need to take a skin swab by running a cotton wool bud gently down the scales from head to tail fin; don't do this in reverse as scale damage may occur. Once you have a sample on the cotton wool bud you ideally need to then analyse it under a microscope by moving the bud back and forth on a glass palette and using an appropriate lens on the microscope for identifying which protozoa if any your fish has. you should do this analysis later as you need to concentrate on getting the fish treated and back in the tank water .
 
Now you've done the scrape, you need to very carefully remove the cotton wool with tweezers. Now either disinfect the wound with malachite green or use the ulcer swab product here: http://www.ntlabs.co.uk/products/Ulcer-Swab.html . Put either, but not both, chemicals onto a cotton wool bud and apply to the wound(s) where the cotton was growing. Ensure none of these chemicals travel to the gills or facial area.
 
Lastly, apply the wound seal product as found here: http://www.ntlabs.co.uk/products/Wound-Seal.html . Again, don't let this chemical travel to the gills/facial area
 
You've now sterilised the wound, removed the fungus (cotton-wool) and put a stop to the site(s) being reinfected.
 
 
I hope all of this information is of use. If you need anymore help just let me know.
 
 
Mark.
 

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