jajeanpierre
Chameleon Enthusiast
Hello jajeanpierre & thank you for taking the time to lend your expertise! In these past couple days we've certainly witnessed Buddha's edema vary in size.. overall, it seems to have lessened, but then at times it does seem pronounced. Definitely depends on the way he's perched.. When he's climbing downwards gravity takes effect, it grows bigger & seems to puff about his occipital lobes. Also, I am indeed a dame, but am not familiar with edemas myself.
I've learned a lot about Vitamin A & I thank everyone for helping with that. We've switched him over to silkworms for now (on a mulberry feed). Honestly, we haven't fed him crickets in a long time.. We've been cycling between silkworms, horn worms & dubias since roughly last Fall. If we pickup hornworms again, we'll load them with fresh veggies (versus the mash).
Do you think visiting the vet is a waste? She was originally recommended as a Herp specialized vet & is a very cool lady - She owns a handful of lizards & snakes herself, including savanna monitor lizard (SO COOL) & a gracillor chameleon she rehabilitated. We really do value her opinion & she seems to genuinely care about Buddha (she call's him "Big B" lol). She's the closest person to an expert we have access to here & has brought Buddha back from ailment before.
Idk, at this point it's like.. whatever we can do to learn more about where this imbalance is coming from. All we want is for Buddha to live a healthy life. If this edema is not as serious as it could be, maybe we'll just make adjustments to his diet & see how it goes?
Who is the vet?
A gracilior? Where did she get that? (I believe I am the only gracilior breeder in the US so unless it is a wild caught it probably came from me originally.)
Unless you are feeding your silkworms fresh mulberry leaves, they are eating a diet that is largely soy meal.
I really don't think a vet will be able to sort this out. It's something you will have to experiment with to find out the triggers for your particular animal. You need to keep records. It can take weeks or months to resolve an edema problem. Also, you will likely have false assumptions of the causes and get superstitious about things you think are triggers. I also think that once an animal has had edema, they are more likely to continue to have it.
A vet can help you find organ failure but really, what are you going to do about that? The testing will be expensive and there really is no solution. Kidney failure is not curable. If he isn't sick, I think a vet is a complete waste of time and money unless you want to pick their brains. I've spent money on vet visits to try to learn something from them.
I think there a a kazillion reasons for edemas and I believe it is all husbandry with a few exceptions such as organ failure, low protein from parasites, toxicosis. Something in their diet or their life is missing or in excess. It could be hydration. It could be natural light. It could be nutritional. The food we feed is garbage. I try to feed wild insects as often as I can because they are just so much more nutritionally dense than any farmed insect even with the best gut loading. The chameleons even notice the difference and get more excited over wild caught bugs.