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Nasty Rat Bite Story

pythons&falcons

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In order to hopefully help others avoid or treat problems of this sort, I have decided to post my experience regarding one really nasty rat bite (well, chew) on a young savannah (cinnamon x mojave) female hold back. I left a young rat in the bin (VERY young, it was still nursing, although with plenty of teeth and perfectly capable of chewing) with this snake, who at 680 grams and 6 months of age had never missed a meal. Not an excuse. I felt horrible about it when it happened and I fully expect/accept any outrage anyone may have toward me when you see the pictures.

I smelled the scent of death and found the rat dead in the last place I looked - the bin of the snake that had never refused a meal - and the horrible injury that had occurred before its death (picture one). I washed the very open wound under warm running water for five minutes straight, then went to my vet in the morning and had a Baytril injection performed. My vet supplied me with 4 additional shots of Baytril which I administered every 3 days. During that time, I rinsed the wound out with warm water once per day, patted it dry (snake actually sat still through all of this), sprayed the open wound with a gel called Vetericyn (Neosporin works the same way), and then placed a gauze bandage over the hole, securing it with two bandaids. I repeated this procedure for about three weeks. The snake went through a shed cycle and the scab that had formed came off, but the skin underneath always looked pink and healthy. I smelled the wound daily to check for infection as well.

Anyway, it's been about two months since the incident, and the last picture on this post is what it looks like now. She is taking food again (small meals) and appears to be well out of the danger zone, although of course she will have a large scar as the result of my stupidity. I just wanted to post this because a few people I consulted advised me to just euthanize her, that she would not make it through, but she did, and really seemed to handle the entire thing quite well. She was in obvious pain for the first two to three days and then seemed to adjust very well to the routine of cleaning, spraying, and bandage changes. If this happens to your snake, please try to save him/her! It is possible, even if the rat chews them right down to the bone! I learned my lesson and I hope this post helps others. Thank you for reading.
 

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I am really glad she made it! That wound looks horrible though, I can only imagine the pain she went through. These injuries are the reason I no longer feed live rodents and opt for F/T, it may be harder to start babies feeding, but to me it is worth it. Sorry about the situation, but at least she is now doing well!
 
I'm glad she has recovered! Your daily cleaning with Vetericyn and administering Baytril were instrumental in her healing. BTW, for future use, Vetericyn is not like Neosporin, it has no antibiotic in it, it is just a wound cleaner hence the need for the Baytril (that wound needed a systemic antibiotic anyway not just a topical). Anyway, as a Veterinary Emergency & Critical Care Technician, I have seen snakes chewed that badly and worse the entire lengths of their bodies. They do not survive, and the truth is most with bites as bad as yours become septic and die despite medicating and cleaning. I think you got lucky. Dbz4246 is right, f/t is best, and it's even cheaper (and much cleaner) than raising your own if you buy in bulk. You'd have to get a deep freeze of course. Otherwise, I recommend humane euthanasia by the cervical dislocation method. You'll have to get someone experienced with it to show you how in person. Well that's my 2¢, and I'm so glad to hear she lived! Great job being vigilant in her wound care!
 
Duly noted, Lupine, thank you. And you're right, the Vetericyn has no antibiotic in it - but with the systemic, I figured it was sort of interchangeable with Neo regarding the "gel protective" factor.....I am very glad I did attempt to save her, because I succeeded and also learned a lot, but I definitely will bear in mind that I was lucky. I would love to switch over to f/t and will. Thank you Lupine, rigomez4, and dbz4246 for your supportive comments.
 
I'd also like to congratulate you on dealing well with a bad situation and having the courage to share the results. Obviously you really feel awful about how it happened, and I'm sure now see why most of us go over to f/t as soon as possible.

Well done on saving your snake, and good to hear the details of how you did it.:thumbsup:
 
wow that looked horrible. I'm glad she's ok. That's my worst nightmare, forgetting a rat in there. I mark the tubs of anyone that got a live rat of any size so I know exactly who has one then triple check to make sure they ate it if i didn't see them swallow it myself. I've had a few live ones hide extremely well, under water bowls and bedding and they love hiding on the tiny ledges around the door in the vision cages. Most of mine that only eat live i just stand there with the tongs ready to intervene if needed and don't let any live ones out of my sight.
 
When we feed live we watch until the snake takes it. Once the snake wraps I make sure the rat isnt chewing the snake. Has happened before and have to try to reposition the rats head. I rather take extra time feeding then to have an accident like this. Let it be a learning lesson. Good job at the healing process though!
 
Thank you for sharing your story with us. I hope this dissuades any future snake owners from feeding live as there are entirely too many risks involved. I used to feed live and the one time I saw my snake getting bit as it was constricting and I had to quickly brain the rat, I decided thawed is the way to go.

Best of luck!
 
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