OldChamKeeper
Chameleon Enthusiast
This is the best info given:
1 - Not all vets are equal. Some are even in the ******* category. The information you were given puts that vet close to that. You need a real herp vet.
2 - I've dealt with this, you either have an infection in that leg (likely) or gout. Infections spread and become systemic resulting in the animal overall looking bad and lethargic.
I'm going to give you the simplest method of caring for him I can type.
Put him on a towel in his cage, we don't want him climbing much. Maybe put him in a smaller cage for now. I call it a Q-cage (quarantine).
Get him a Zoo-med 5.0 bulb and make sure he's within 12-18" of it. Only let it shine thru screen, no glass or plastic. Put it on a 12 hour timer.
Temp: Day temp 76-82 ( I keep mine around 82 but well hydrated when sick). Night temp above 70 while sick.
Hydration: If he will drink from a dripper, great. If not you may need to get some down him the hard way. I use a 50/50 mix of water and gatorade on sick herps. No issues over the years with this. Try not to soak him too much if at all, we don't need him stressing out more.
Now you got a simple set up for a sick Cham. Next is some Meds.
Baytril or Tri-Methyl-Sulfate is a good start. I prefer the sulfate as it is easier on their kidneys if this is a long term treatment....however if he has a fracture causing an infection the Baytril would be a good bet since it won't be a real long term program.
I'm gonna warn you when I say you have little time to treat this, might already be too late.
I'm not a Vet, just a hermit who lives in his cave and has been keeping chams all his life. I come out once in a while.
Good luck
I understand your frustration and confusion.
Yes, please stop giving both your chams DAILY D3.
Panthers and Veiled can have D3 2x a month.
Jackson's only get D3 1x a month.
Although some D3 is necessary for chams kept indoors ---too much is very bad.
You can call it D3 toxicity or Hypervitaminosis D but no matter what you call it, too much D3 given to a chameleon can do serious harm to internal organs.
Your cham, with his swollen leg, damaged toe and lethargy sounds very much like he has a severe infection in his leg.
It sounds like your cham had injured his toe which allowed bacteria to get in.
The bacteria have caused an infection to spread throughout his leg.
Oftentimes, chams get their nail stuck in the cage screening and injure toes and/or break nails when trying to break free of the screen.
In addition to an injection of Baytril, he should be receiving an antibiotic every day, regardless of whether it is injected or oral..
This dosing is not a guess on my part, it comes directly from the manufacturer of Baytril , on Page 4http://www.animalhealth.bayer.com/fileadmin/media/baytril/pdf_companion/kap8.pdf
One of my Jackson's chams acquired an infection this way.
His foot was swollen, as the infection had not yet progressed to the rest of the leg.
My chams' vet squeezed the foot to get the thick, cheesy pus to come out through the toe where the infection had begun and the nail had been lost.
He instructed me to do the same the next day and, if need be, the following day, too.
My cham was given oral Baytril for several weeks, which cleared up the infection.
An infection that has caused the entire leg to be swollen may require even more aggressive treatment but not being a vet, I do not know for certain nor do I know what that treatment might be.
You did not say what medicine, if any, the vet gave you to administer or what else he told you to do, if anything.
If the only treatment has been a single shot of Baytril, I would quickly find someone else with more medical knowledge about chameleons to treat the poor cham.
What troubles me is that your vet has told you things that are 100% known to be untrue and, unless I've misunderstood, your cham seemed far better before treatment than afterwards.
Vets spend very little time in veterinary school learning about reptile medicine.
Unless they have specialized in it, they often have only a very general knowledge of it.
Feel free to send me a PM or email by clicking on my username.
1 - Not all vets are equal. Some are even in the ******* category. The information you were given puts that vet close to that. You need a real herp vet.
2 - I've dealt with this, you either have an infection in that leg (likely) or gout. Infections spread and become systemic resulting in the animal overall looking bad and lethargic.
I'm going to give you the simplest method of caring for him I can type.
Put him on a towel in his cage, we don't want him climbing much. Maybe put him in a smaller cage for now. I call it a Q-cage (quarantine).
Get him a Zoo-med 5.0 bulb and make sure he's within 12-18" of it. Only let it shine thru screen, no glass or plastic. Put it on a 12 hour timer.
Temp: Day temp 76-82 ( I keep mine around 82 but well hydrated when sick). Night temp above 70 while sick.
Hydration: If he will drink from a dripper, great. If not you may need to get some down him the hard way. I use a 50/50 mix of water and gatorade on sick herps. No issues over the years with this. Try not to soak him too much if at all, we don't need him stressing out more.
Now you got a simple set up for a sick Cham. Next is some Meds.
Baytril or Tri-Methyl-Sulfate is a good start. I prefer the sulfate as it is easier on their kidneys if this is a long term treatment....however if he has a fracture causing an infection the Baytril would be a good bet since it won't be a real long term program.
I'm gonna warn you when I say you have little time to treat this, might already be too late.
I'm not a Vet, just a hermit who lives in his cave and has been keeping chams all his life. I come out once in a while.
Good luck