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A GREAT REASON TO ALWAYS QUARANTINE

allreptiles1966

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So i picked up this lovely sunglow male.
Threw him in quarantine like i do all new comers.
This is why i am glad i use that room.

I just put it down and now worried for all my boas. They are two floors lower then quarantine. I never go from one room to the other.
Will post pic and try to post video if a boa with IBD.
DAMN.

So people,quarantine your boas.
 

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IBD

Cant load video. Maybe i can post on my
you tube and post link.

Last pic is his end. This time i shot it through his head and it died very quiclky compared to be heading.

This type if stuff sucks.
 
Just curious, since you used the letters - was the diagnosis of IBD confirmed, or are you basing it on symptoms?
 
Rich that is horrible to see please keep us informed about the IBD possibility and please let us know which breeder you got the snake from thanks
 
Im curious about how he was diagnosed, i work at a vet clinic where my boss has been studying for his boards and hes been studying the accuracy of different biopsy samples to confirm IBD. Did you test it with a blood sample, Pancreas, or a liver biopsy? Im just curious to see how other people have done it.
 
Just curious, since you used the letters - was the diagnosis of IBD confirmed, or are you basing it on symptoms?

I am basing it on symtoms only Harold. I know it could be neurological,but either way it was a death sentence. Fortunatly it was the only boa in quarantine.

I personally dont want to pay for the biopsy on him. He was two floors up and a breeder loan. The person is not from on line and doesnt breed boas. This was his pet. He did say it previously had mites and was treated. He said about a year before,and from what i read it usually shows up before a year. But i always stay to my quarantine habits. He had this boa with another stacked over this one and she is not showing any signs.
I do have it frozen outside in a freezer by itself in an old freezer. Just in case anything shows up in my collection.
I already scrubbed my cages with bleach and rinsed well.

Thanks to you guys for the thoughts.
 
Im curious about how he was diagnosed, i work at a vet clinic where my boss has been studying for his boards and hes been studying the accuracy of different biopsy samples to confirm IBD. Did you test it with a blood sample, Pancreas, or a liver biopsy? Im just curious to see how other people have done it.

Does your boss want it? He can biopsy it himself

We were going to get a blood test for him,but i noticed it on thursday and wouldnt get in for a week.
I was not taking the chance by keeping it in my house longer. So i put it down and froze him.
 
I've always been told not to freeze a dead critter if I want a necropsy, as many tests can't be done on tissue that was frozen. Instead put it in the refrigerator on the lowest shelf or the meat drawer so it stays just above freezing.
 
um... yeah. You really needed to do a necropsy with tissue work on that boa to start making claims of IBD. There are multiple things that can cause the neuro issues, now you may never know what caused it and it's probably too late for IBD testing as you froze the body (never freeze, always refrigerate if you want to have a necropsy done!). It could have been a toxin, overheating, parasites/virus, IBD, possibly other things I can't think of right now. Also the thing with 'a year' is more for pythons I believe. IBD can stay dormant in boids for a long time from what I've read.

I went through an IBD scare (wrote it up on this forum a couple years ago) - turned out after necropsy and her tissues were sent for pathology testing (brain, liver, I forget what else, I think 5 samples were taken and sent to UC Davis) - it wasn't IBD. She had parasites that got to her brain. It still sucked (and was quite expensive) but having the peace of mind knowing my collection did not have IBD was so worth it. Now you don't know what is going on. :/

Keep a close eye on everything you have, if it was IBD, it's not known exactly how it's transmitted yet (theories are mites and simply air transmission). I hope it works out for you...

I'm sorry for you and your friend's loss


edit to add - yeah beheading is never a good way to put down snakes, their brains can stay active for up to an hour after beheading, they need to either be put down at the vet (mine was put down via heart stick) or blunt force head trama to destroy the brain (gunshot works I guess) but again, then you destroy the brain which is one of the tissues that needs to be sent to lab for testing
 
I agree with April. As someone who has also seen what an IBD scare can do (also posted on this forum), it's better to be safe than assume. Note that only a few labs can make that diagnosis for sure -- lesser labs have made errors and misdiagnosed. While it may cost some money, the peace of mind from knowing for sure is well worth it.

In addition, if it is IBD, knowing for sure will allow the owner to trace that animal back to its source and hopefully figure out where the infection came from...and if it is IBD, it needs to be addressed for other buyers' safety. You can press the guilty party for reimbursement and action...or down the road, others (who do not practice such good QT measures) will lose their entire collections.

By the way, major kudos for a good QT program. Either way you should be fine.
 
Im sorry about the freezing. I thought that would preserve better. Thats one thing i have not learned about. I had no interest in ibd,although i read a bunch. I just make sure i use quarantine practuces,i learned many things from some of you guys and im glad i did,or i possibly could have a bigger problem.
There were no mites present. But as stated,a year ago he had them.

Once again,thanks for the info April and Cliff. If there ever is a problem like this,i will not freeze.

So theres no way they can rule it out since its frozen?
 
Freezing causes tissue damage. It causes the cells to explode. These cells need to be intact for a proper diagnosis. Once they are exploded/destroyed, there is no way they can compare them to normal tissue cells.

So yeah, freezing is an almost guarantee that a diagnosis will not be accurate.
 
Freezing causes tissue damage. It causes the cells to explode. These cells need to be intact for a proper diagnosis. Once they are exploded/destroyed, there is no way they can compare them to normal tissue cells.

So yeah, freezing is an almost guarantee that a diagnosis will not be accurate.

Thanks Rich. I can and will take this as another lesson. A mistake i wont make again.
 
um... yeah. You really needed to do a necropsy with tissue work on that boa to start making claims of IBD. There are multiple things that can cause the neuro issues, now you may never know what caused it and it's probably too late for IBD testing as you froze the body (never freeze, always refrigerate if you want to have a necropsy done!). It could have been a toxin, overheating, parasites/virus, IBD, possibly other things I can't think of right now. Also the thing with 'a year' is more for pythons I believe. IBD can stay dormant in boids for a long time from what I've read.

I went through an IBD scare (wrote it up on this forum a couple years ago) - turned out after necropsy and her tissues were sent for pathology testing (brain, liver, I forget what else, I think 5 samples were taken and sent to UC Davis) - it wasn't IBD. She had parasites that got to her brain. It still sucked (and was quite expensive) but having the peace of mind knowing my collection did not have IBD was so worth it. Now you don't know what is going on. :/

Keep a close eye on everything you have, if it was IBD, it's not known exactly how it's transmitted yet (theories are mites and simply air transmission). I hope it works out for you...

I'm sorry for you and your friend's loss


edit to add - yeah beheading is never a good way to put down snakes, their brains can stay active for up to an hour after beheading, they need to either be put down at the vet (mine was put down via heart stick) or blunt force head trama to destroy the brain (gunshot works I guess) but again, then you destroy the brain which is one of the tissues that needs to be sent to lab for testing

:iagree: It is always a great idea to send out a biopsy, i have an old BCC import male who started showing signs of neurological problems, however the biopsy's came back negative and his bloodwork showed that he had malaria which is not that uncommon in WC boas, he eats great and everything, he's just a little tricky to handle.
 
Also the thing with 'a year' is more for pythons I believe. IBD can stay dormant in boids for a long time from what I've read.

^ Carriers of IBD can go years without showing symptoms, both boas and pythons thats why its so scary! you could have had an animal for 10 years and one day it could start showing symptoms, from my experience when a carrier of IBD becomes sick from an unrealted scenario thats when they start to go downhill.
 
testing for ibd in live boas?

Ok,if you have to send in organs for testing to get accurate results,what do i do
for live boa testing. Will my local reptile vet be able to do the blood test and come up with good results? For the safety of my collection i would like a few breeders tested. Even though i practice the quarantine methods and in two rooms above,i use humidifiers and they pass moisture around. I am a bit paranoid now.
If you think a local herp vet is not good enough,who do i have him send the blood samples to?

Thank you
Rich
 
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