jolieg8
New Member
- Messages
- 8
- Location
- Montreal, Canada
This seems like a lot, I know, but I'm in a really strange position and my vet isn't being very helpful.
I have a three year old crested gecko that I adopted from a breeder that was finished using him to spawn. I've had him since September, so 6 months.
His illness: (you can skip this, it's just backstory)
In late December, early January he got very ill: not eating, not pooping (since he was adopted he was pooping maybe once a month), and wouldn't even come out of the foliage where he would sleep when he used to spend the nights jumping about. He even lost 6g in about a week, which is when I decided to take him to the vet. It was a mystery illness that we threw random antibiotics and supplements at. It wasn't impaction (though I switched from coconut fiber to paper towels in case), wasn't calcium deficiency (I would mix calcium supplements with his CGD), it wasn't MBD (or at least it didn't show on an X-ray), and it wasn't parasites. Might've been a slight pneumonia because his tank was a little cold until I got a second heater (about the same time he started being very ill) and the doctor told me to also add a UVB light..
A month and a half after the initial vet visit (today), he is back to his normal energy levels and poops about once a week.
Here is where the problem starts:
I had been force feeding him a prescribed vet food so he could regain his strength. I did this through a syringe and BOY did he hate it. As he regained his strength he would use it against me during feeding time. It was extremely stressful for him, and I feel kinda bad even though it was a necessary evil. Now that he is back to normal, though, he should start eating on his own. I tried for a week and a half to no avail.
I would change his food daily (banana Repashy or insect Repashy), and present it to him on the end of a chopstick, place him next to the bowl, placed the bowl in a hiding spot he likes so he feels safe, nothing. He would not eat for 4 nights. On the 5th night I hand fed him because he had lost weight again and I was worried. then tried again for 4 nights and nothing again. I've also seen him approach his food bowl on his own, give it a lick, and just decide against eating. Now I'm here for advice
2 Hypotheses:
I believe he is either not fully healed from his mystery illness, so he still doesn't have his appetite
OR
he is too stressed to eat.
He gets extremely stressed anytime I come near his tank (which is often since I study from home and his tank is in my room) and probably associates me negatively to food. I spray his tank morning, noon, evening, and right before bedtime (heating in my house makes for a very dry air), so I have to open his tank at least twice during his awake hours, which stresses him out. He doesn't open his mouth at me or start sprinting around his cage, but his back does get round and he starts breathing heavily.
My solution:
What I plan to do with him is continue hand feeding him until he gets nice and heavy, then stop him cold turkey for at least a week and see if he'll finally eat on his own, no interventions, no handling, nothing. I want little to no contact with him. If that doesn't work, I don't know what I'd do.
My Questions:
-Do you think he is just sick still or too stressed?
-Is my solution any good? are there any improvements I can make?
-If my solution doesn't work, what should I do next?
-Any ideas on what his mystery illness is?
-What can I do to reduce his stress for the week I stop hand feeding? (I'm thinking a blanket over the glass)
ATM his tank is always 60-99% humidity (99% at the bottom of the tank only when I put a humidifier at night or when I'm out for the day, it gets really dry at the top though)
temperature is 69F at the coldest corner and 82F at the warmest and he has many many hiding spots and things to climb.
Once he starts eating on his own again I'll be able to regain my best friend's trust
I have a three year old crested gecko that I adopted from a breeder that was finished using him to spawn. I've had him since September, so 6 months.
His illness: (you can skip this, it's just backstory)
In late December, early January he got very ill: not eating, not pooping (since he was adopted he was pooping maybe once a month), and wouldn't even come out of the foliage where he would sleep when he used to spend the nights jumping about. He even lost 6g in about a week, which is when I decided to take him to the vet. It was a mystery illness that we threw random antibiotics and supplements at. It wasn't impaction (though I switched from coconut fiber to paper towels in case), wasn't calcium deficiency (I would mix calcium supplements with his CGD), it wasn't MBD (or at least it didn't show on an X-ray), and it wasn't parasites. Might've been a slight pneumonia because his tank was a little cold until I got a second heater (about the same time he started being very ill) and the doctor told me to also add a UVB light..
A month and a half after the initial vet visit (today), he is back to his normal energy levels and poops about once a week.
Here is where the problem starts:
I had been force feeding him a prescribed vet food so he could regain his strength. I did this through a syringe and BOY did he hate it. As he regained his strength he would use it against me during feeding time. It was extremely stressful for him, and I feel kinda bad even though it was a necessary evil. Now that he is back to normal, though, he should start eating on his own. I tried for a week and a half to no avail.
I would change his food daily (banana Repashy or insect Repashy), and present it to him on the end of a chopstick, place him next to the bowl, placed the bowl in a hiding spot he likes so he feels safe, nothing. He would not eat for 4 nights. On the 5th night I hand fed him because he had lost weight again and I was worried. then tried again for 4 nights and nothing again. I've also seen him approach his food bowl on his own, give it a lick, and just decide against eating. Now I'm here for advice
2 Hypotheses:
I believe he is either not fully healed from his mystery illness, so he still doesn't have his appetite
OR
he is too stressed to eat.
He gets extremely stressed anytime I come near his tank (which is often since I study from home and his tank is in my room) and probably associates me negatively to food. I spray his tank morning, noon, evening, and right before bedtime (heating in my house makes for a very dry air), so I have to open his tank at least twice during his awake hours, which stresses him out. He doesn't open his mouth at me or start sprinting around his cage, but his back does get round and he starts breathing heavily.
My solution:
What I plan to do with him is continue hand feeding him until he gets nice and heavy, then stop him cold turkey for at least a week and see if he'll finally eat on his own, no interventions, no handling, nothing. I want little to no contact with him. If that doesn't work, I don't know what I'd do.
My Questions:
-Do you think he is just sick still or too stressed?
-Is my solution any good? are there any improvements I can make?
-If my solution doesn't work, what should I do next?
-Any ideas on what his mystery illness is?
-What can I do to reduce his stress for the week I stop hand feeding? (I'm thinking a blanket over the glass)
ATM his tank is always 60-99% humidity (99% at the bottom of the tank only when I put a humidifier at night or when I'm out for the day, it gets really dry at the top though)
temperature is 69F at the coldest corner and 82F at the warmest and he has many many hiding spots and things to climb.
Once he starts eating on his own again I'll be able to regain my best friend's trust