flapneck chameleon with swollen neck that is not eating.

rmn88

New Member
Please can somebody assist urgently, my previous post was totally ignored and is now gone for some reason. Attached are pictures of my cham, I am unsure if icarus is male or female but he does have a thicker tail base or so it seems to me. He has started having a swollen neck issue from late last week. It goes away and returns, I've read that this happens with excessive vitamin A or gutloading crickets with too much carrots. Please can somebody assist in confirming icarus's sex so I can deduce if the lack of eating and the neck issue are linked to being gravid for example.
 

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Looks like your chameleon has gular edema. Gular edema is the swelling of the neck usually caused by too much or too little vitamin A. Do you supply a multivitamin such as Reptivite or Herpitive? Your chameleon looks like a female (no hemipenal bulge). I'd recommend a laying box just incase.
 
Can't tell the sex from the photos...sorry.

If the "edema" is coming and going then I don't think it's real edema.

From your previous post you need to change your supplementing. We recommend that the insects are dusted just before feeding them to the chameleon with a phosphorous-free calcium powder at most feedings. Twice a month its recommended that you dust with a phosphorous-free calcium/D3 powder and twice a month with a vitamin powder that contains a beta carotene (prOformed) source of vitamin A.

Gutloading with carrots should not cause an overdose of vitamin A because beta carotene sources of vitamin A do not build up in the system. I don't know why people keep being concerned about carrots when it comes to vitamin A.

If you think it is possibly a gravid female then why not put an egglaying bin in the cage?
 
Thank you both for taking the time to respond, I was starting to think I wouldn't get any feedback. Today Icarus's neck is normal, this morning it was swollen but its seem to have cleared, I dust with pure calcium twice a week calcium and D3 twice a month and unfortunately I have not been able to find anything in terms of a mutivitamin powder, I have a reptione water dechlorinator with added vitamins which is what I use to spray my ficus plan to encourage drinking and I gutload with egg carrots spinach and some high quality flake food and I know this is not an alternative to a proper multivitamin powder however I have only found specific vitamins for bearded dragons thus far and the people in the pet stores are unsure if it could be used on a cham so I didn't want to experiment. I've been advised that even if icarus is a female its winter and not breeding season so its unlikely that the signs are a result of a gravid female along with his estimated age of 6-9months. I will definitely put in a breeding bin just in case, I haven't done so in fear of him becoming impacted. I know, I'm very ocd, but I just want to avoid as many issues as possible considering I cannot get a vets assistance directly,
 
The vitamins you spray on the plant...do they contain prEformed vitamin A or D3?

Calcium should be dusted on the insects at most feedings...not just twice a month.

What is the flake food you use? Does it have prEformed vitamin A or D3 in it? Spinach is not good to use often as a gutload because it binds calcium. You can use dandelion greens, kale, endive, sweet red pepper, squash, zucchini, sweet potato, collards, etc to gutload with.

There is a type of sand produced by Kings that comes in a white bag with blue, red and yellow sand box toys on it that I have used and it has never impacted any of my chameleons.

6 to 9 months is not too young for that species of chameleon to breed BTW.

Hope this helps.
 
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