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Did you call and ask the vet’s office if they have experience with Jackson’s chams? Could you fill out the ask for help form in my signature below, please?I'm in need of advise on temporal gland d infection in on of my Jackson's chameleons. I have a vet appointment tomorrow but I'm unsure of his competence with reptiles (new vet)
Sorry, I read that wrong, so they don’t have cham experience? It’s at least a start and with help from the vet and here, hopefully your cham will get the proper treatmentShe's in a large reptibreeze enclosure. Linear t8 high output uvb. Basking are stays in low 80s. Humidity during day is 30% and 70-80% at night misting twice a day in early morning and evening. Humidifiers come on around 1am and run until around 6am. She gets reptical no d3 every feeding and reptivite once a month.
The vets office said they treat Jackson's but on the other hand the receptionist had to go ask if they treated so I'm afraid they may not have adequate experywith them. There are no other vets in my area that even say they treat reptiles
You can always call and ask if they have foraz. Why are you so defensive about filling out the form? If your husbandry is correct, there shouldn’t be any issues towards filling it out. You can also take your filled out form to the vet with you so they can see your husbandry quick and easyI already no the main cause if temporal gland infection but myself and several others can't figure out what's caused it in this case as it's usually husbandry related and temps and humidity are in range. I also know I need foraz for antibiotics but being a more rural vet clinic I'm afraid they won't have it. I'm trying to find out if there's anything else I can do to help her. I have 5 Jackson's she's the only one having issues and all are kept the same.
Thank you would the bee pollen help anyThe only over the counter treatment I have heard used with TGI is Miruga Honey applied topically to the affected gland. This is in addition to antibiotic therapy and not a complete treatment. It can draw out the infection and help dry up the area. It has some antibiotic properties as well. Health food stores carry it. I have never dealt with it (knock wood) this is just from my reading on the subject. If your vet doesn't carry the antibiotic there are compounding pharmacies that dilute drugs for use in small animals that can overnight it to you if your vet calls them with the prescription.
Thank you I've trying to find someone who actually had a clue about it. This has not been easy. Will the bee pollen also helpThe only over the counter treatment I have heard used with TGI is Miruga Honey applied topically to the affected gland. This is in addition to antibiotic therapy and not a complete treatment. It can draw out the infection and help dry up the area. It has some antibiotic properties as well. Health food stores carry it. I have never dealt with it (knock wood) this is just from my reading on the subject. If your vet doesn't carry the antibiotic there are compounding pharmacies that dilute drugs for use in small animals that can overnight it to you if your vet calls them with the prescription.