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Sorry to hear. That really sucks and I had a very similar thing happen with one of my chams as well. Only I didn't notice the BRUISES on my cham until I got home and examined the body. She too was an "expert". There were no way that the bruises were that intense on the cham if there wasn't a lot of force applied.
WHY aren't one of us on here a vet?!
Sorry to hear. That really sucks and I had a very similar thing happen with one of my chams as well. Only I didn't notice the BRUISES on my cham until I got home and examined the body. She too was an "expert". There were no way that the bruises were that intense on the cham if there wasn't a lot of force applied.
WHY aren't one of us on here a vet?!
On a positive note I did get some good antibiotics out of it for my next Cham.
I had a vet actually break some ribs on Doughnut and she still does not like hands to this day because of it. I still have yet to find a good vet in Philadelphia area.
On a positive note I did get some good antibiotics out of it for my next Cham.
Believe me, no one is rougher handling a chameleon than a collector who is terrified of the animal and is getting very little money for it. Many Africans think chameleons are evil thanks to Christian missionaries that associated chameleons with the devil.
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I hate to disagree with you on this one, but I believe it is a fear brought on by superstition, and a witch doctor spreading nonsense more so than the Christians. Now if we were talking about snakes you might have something there.
I am a Christian and I want to say that the "serpent" is what is associated with the devil not the snake.I've seen an awful lot of wild caught chameleons but never seen one with obviously broken ribs. I have ever noticed. Broken tails, broken and broken sail fins are the most common type of fracture I've seen. I've seen pelvis injuries. Believe me, no one is rougher handling a chameleon than a collector who is terrified of the animal and is getting very little money for it. Many Africans think chameleons are evil thanks to Christian missionaries that associated chameleons with the devil. Expensive animals like Parsons are treated very well by their collectors and exporters simply because they get a lot of money for them. Melleri and quads are not.
Again, I'm going out on a limb and defend a vet.
Personally, I don't know how you could actually break ribs with rough handling unless Metabolic Bone Disease was the underlying problem. If she had MBD, it might be very easy to break ribs with very gentle handling, depending on how bad the MBD was and how weak the rib bones were.
I've seen an awful lot of wild caught chameleons but never seen one with obviously broken ribs. I have ever noticed. Broken tails, broken and broken sail fins are the most common type of fracture I've seen. I've seen pelvis injuries. Believe me, no one is rougher handling a chameleon than a collector who is terrified of the animal and is getting very little money for it. Many Africans think chameleons are evil thanks to Christian missionaries that associated chameleons with the devil. Expensive animals like Parsons are treated very well by their collectors and exporters simply because they get a lot of money for them. Melleri and quads are not.
I once looked at photos of a friend's necropsy and was positive I saw broken ribs. He hadn't noticed what I saw when he took the pictures or when he did the necropsy,. He retrieved the now stinking body out of the garbage and had a good look. There was nothing wrong with the ribs. He ended up bending them trying to break them and he couldn't because they were too flexible.
So, if your vet broke ribs handling her, I would look at some other reason the ribs were weak.