microracer24
Member
How often do you do this?I use Vitamin A liquid gels that you can find in the vitamin isle of drugstores. I either inject it into a feeder or put a drop on the feeder and then feed it to my Cham.
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How often do you do this?I use Vitamin A liquid gels that you can find in the vitamin isle of drugstores. I either inject it into a feeder or put a drop on the feeder and then feed it to my Cham.
there is no linkIn my searching this forum related chameleon eye health I found this thread that realy answers a lot of questions! It also brings up new questions that relate very well to our topic here! Check it out:
"Viatimin A Deficiencies in Cameleons"
My apologies, I should have explained it a little better. You are correct, there is no link. In the right top of the Forum page there is a magnifying glass icon. Click on it. Now type in the words:there is no link
Has to be retrinyl palmitate!!I believe Jaxy girl explained the vit A deficiency very well. And this is the exact source of a MAJOR amount of eye problems caused in Chams.
Jaxy girl I was getting ready to post something simalar before I read your posts. I think you explained it extremely well.
I always have vitA gel caps on hand. Take in mind you need a very specific vit A. View attachment 165855
I happen to work with ophthalmologists and we stress the importance of taking lutein/eye vitamins to help 'slow progression' of eye disease, mainly macular degeneration. As far as I know there are no studies as far as reptiles. Who knows if macular degeneration affects an animal. That would be extremely hard to show, and I'd love to see evidence of it....How about herbs and berries? Bilberries are great for human eye health! How about Lutein to protect your macula and retina. Astaxanthin helps to fight free-radicals in your entire eye. People add the antioxidant power from vitamins A, C, and E to keep their eyes strong and improve tissue health. Also adding zinc to your regimen to maintain the high levels your eyes require for peak vision health. Any ideas if these would help chameleons? If we have any veterinarians here your input would be appreciated!
So, I have already asked about herbs and berries but no one responded regarding them! These help with human eye health! I wonder if anyone out there, maby some of our forum members who are veterinarians, as any idea if these might be beneficial for chameleon eye health? Your responces would be treasured!How about herbs and berries? Bilberries are great for human eye health! How about Lutein to protect your macula and retina. Astaxanthin helps to fight free-radicals in your entire eye. People add the antioxidant power from vitamins A, C, and E to keep their eyes strong and improve tissue health. Also adding zinc to your regimen to maintain the high levels your eyes require for peak vision health. Any ideas if these would help chameleons? If we have any veterinarians here your input would be appreciated!
So, I have already asked about herbs and berries but no one responded regarding them! These help with human eye health! I wonder if anyone out there, maby some of our forum members who are veterinarians, as any idea if these might be beneficial for chameleon eye health? Your responces would be treasured!
Is this in regard to gutloading, straight feeding or both? Does the powder reduce the amount of sugar while still providing the good stuff?Herbs and berries can work for or against eye health. Chameleons are not designed to consume high sugar and high phosphorus foods, such as most fruits. Too much sugar, as in when humans are diabetic and don't regulate their insulin levels, even high blood pressure ( not caused by berries obviously ) can impact vision and eye healthy.
I use blueberry powder as a source of antioxidants, in my gutload and that shouldn't cause any problem and should provide some benefit.
I am currently having eye issues with my female Panther. She had just started to develop her pink colouration when I noticed her keeping an eye closed when she thought I wasn't looking. I immediately went the Saline route for a few days. I thought this helped until I noticed her closing both eyes when I wasn't looking.
I just recently stumbled upon this thread in a search for more info, and I'm currently on day 3 of treatment. My plan was to cover one cricket per day for 5 days with Vit A gel, then once a week, and then once monthly from here on out. Is this an advisable routine? She's a first generation CB, her parents were WC if this makes a difference. Thank you.
I would recommend to check why she is closing their eyes. Vit a in palmitate form can be dangerous if you give too much. Do you think she has actually vit a deficiency?
I tried to ask her why she had her eyes closed, but she ignored me. I'll stop the Vit A if it's a bad idea. At this point though, it was either watch her go down hill or try something to help.
I had read WC chams can have trouble metabolizing Vit A from supplements, and she isn't too far removed from her WC roots. My male panther also has a bad shot with his tongue but I've never had a problem with him other than that. He gets plenty of calcium and UVB, so I figured that could also be more of a vision problem for him.
Sorry for the long post, I can continue this in the Health Clinic if I'm disrupting the conversation here.
Tongue issues and eye issues can both result from lack of A. I would not recomended dosing vitamin A, without a confirmed diagnosis, from an EXPERIENCED reptile vet. The concentration in your gel is unknown to us and it's not good for their other organs to mass dose anything, even if deficiency is the problem.
If it were me and I hadn't been using a Vitamin A supplement, with preformed A, I'd choose a reputable product, with preformed A, take note of the amount of Vitamin A ( you don't want the highest dosing brand, but the lowest dose ) and supplement 1/3 of the feeders sparingly, once per week, with plenty of hydration and monitoring for edema. A vet check is better than guessing and treating something you don't know for certain is wrong.