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Info Rodentpro

To add to this, rodent pin worms are common and are probably found in many supplier's feeders, and most private rodent colonies. They are not passed on to herps but do get passed through and the eggs will be detected in fecal floats. That said, a herp vet who knows what they are looking for will easily distinguish between rodent pins, which are harmless and require no action, and pins that are parasitic to herps and should be treated.

You are correct! There are many different types on pinworm and the majority are host specific. Reptilian pinworm can take a long time to show up (be seen/exspelled outside the body) so I would lay money these snakes have been infected for a very long time. Reptiles can't get rodent pinworm, that's the way it goes.
 
so I would lay money these snakes have been infected for a very long time. Reptiles can't get rodent pinworm, that's the way it goes.

I would agree IF it is verified that what the OP is seeing are actually worms. Have they even been identified yet? A fecal will detect the ova of both rodent and reptile pinworms but that isn't necessarily going to verify what he is seeing in the water dish.

By chance, do these worms resemble very small grains of rice. floating on the surface of the water?
 
im not saying the OP is right or wrong about whats going on but i go through about 120$ (not including shipping) worth of rodent pro's frozen rodents in almost every size each month and i haven't had any problems. i've tried other company's rodents and always go back to RP bc their rats are always healthy and appear cleaner in comparison. i would think i would have the same issues if it came from them. If you can prove the source is RP i'd really like to know. can you have the rats tested?
 
This "info thread" is getting out of hand. Do we have an eta on the final results from this vet??


Not that it really matters now since most people searching for is company will only read a page or two before making a decision. This thread is waaaaaaaay too early.
 
I think this thread was too early as well. I think that all the testing should have been done and THEN a thread shoud have been started if it was found that RodentPro is to blame. And, info thread or not, I think they should have been notified as a common courtesy. Even if this isn't a bad guy thread, if I were them, I would feel like I needed to defend myself and my company after reading what was said about me. There are allegations being made here, even if the OP says that some of them weren't worded very well once he looked back on them.

But, I must say that I do commend you for trying to get to the bottom of this. I may not necessarily agree with how you're going about it with this thread, but even if these worms don't harm your snakes, I am glad that you don't want them around regardless.
 
All animals can get "pinworms",even humans, but pinworms are "species specific" meaning every species have their "own" pinworm. Tortoises, snakes, mammals, etc., have different pinworms, etc., but they are still pinworms. Species "specific" means that snake pinworms can affect snakes but would have no bearing on mammals. Pinworms are 'fecal to oral" route, it is a "direct" parasite, meaning the snake had to come into contact with infected feces that contained the pinworm egg and digested it. Yes, it could digest the mouse pinworm but the mouse pinworm because it is "species specific" would just pass out the snake without doing harm. I think either your test showed "mouse pinworm" that would not affect the snake or the test did indeed show that your snake is infected with "snake pinworm". Pinworms are "self-limiting" in nature, but in the control of captivity, if feces are not cleaned up asap, the snake could reinfect itself. And freezing would indeed kill most parasites, definitely pinworms, so I personally don't think "Rodentpro" is the problem.
Mary Ann
 
I may get flamed for this but.

In my honest opinion the OP posted this thread prematurely, BUT for all the right reason's. It seems as though he was honestly trying to WARN the community of POSSIBLE problems. Before you jump down his throat, understand he initially was not trying to flag rodentpro as a "bad company to deal with", hense the informational thread. He also is going to the vet with samples, above and beyond when comparing actions of 90% of reptile owners.

This thread will be here for as long as this site is, I just hate to see someone get nailed for trying to help (in his own way, right or wrong he was trying to help). It just sucks to try to do something nice for someone only to have it back fire in your face.

:)
 
I buy from rodent pro and never have had a problem. I have had a couple of dirty bags before with litter and stuff in them but that's out of hundreds of transactions. How would a worm live through a deep freeze? Plus they sale xl and xxl rats for 1.25 super cool people and great customer service.

Alex
 
pinworms in rodents

I, personally, was not villifying anyone, just tried to make an educated observation on what I read previously. I think, in this instance, the vet is misinformed and
got this guy all worked up about the possibility of these worms coming from his feeders. I can well understand that when you go to a vet you expect them to know what they are talking about, unfortunately there aren't many vets really interested enough in reptile medicine to do their "homework" before they make a "diagnosis". The vets that know reptiles would have quickly put his mind at ease. Even if the mice test comes back with pinworms, it doesn't mean that the snake got the pinworms from the feeders. And if he never saw them before, just means he never tested for them. You can't always see pinworms with the naked eye. Only when they are in "overload" would you see them. I wish him luck in sorting this out.
MaryAnn
 
I may get flamed for this but.

In my honest opinion the OP posted this thread prematurely, BUT for all the right reason's. It seems as though he was honestly trying to WARN the community of POSSIBLE problems. Before you jump down his throat, understand he initially was not trying to flag rodentpro as a "bad company to deal with", hense the informational thread. He also is going to the vet with samples, above and beyond when comparing actions of 90% of reptile owners.

This thread will be here for as long as this site is, I just hate to see someone get nailed for trying to help (in his own way, right or wrong he was trying to help). It just sucks to try to do something nice for someone only to have it back fire in your face.

:)

If this thread is just "premature" as several have stated, please explain why. What were the right reasons and what are we being warned about? The very basis of the thread is ridiculous. Rodents can't pass pin worms to reptiles. Even if the test comes back positive for rodent pins, and it probably will, so what? These are commonly found in rodents.

Whatever is swimming around in his water bowl could not have been passed on to the snake by feeders, regardless of the source. Any experienced herp vet knows this. Testing the fecal matter of the rodents won't help identify what the OP is dealing with. He needs to identify the organism itself and he needs to have the snake tested, multiple times, using both floats and smears.

If anything I am stating confuses anybody, I suggest adding a copy of this book to your library http://www.amazon.com/Understanding-Reptile-Parasites-Advanced-Vivarium/dp/1882770900
 
If this thread is just "premature" as several have stated, please explain why. What were the right reasons and what are we being warned about? The very basis of the thread is ridiculous. Rodents can't pass pin worms to reptiles. Even if the test comes back positive for rodent pins, and it probably will, so what? These are commonly found in rodents.

Whatever is swimming around in his water bowl could not have been passed on to the snake by feeders, regardless of the source. Any experienced herp vet knows this. Testing the fecal matter of the rodents won't help identify what the OP is dealing with. He needs to identify the organism itself and he needs to have the snake tested, multiple times, using both floats and smears.

If anything I am stating confuses anybody, I suggest adding a copy of this book to your library http://www.amazon.com/Understanding-Reptile-Parasites-Advanced-Vivarium/dp/1882770900

Actually many experienced herp people are misguided. In Kevin McCurley book The Complete Ball Python he states they can get pinworm from feeder rodents. The only way that might happen is if the rodents are eating herps for food and you then feed the rodents to other herps.
 
If this thread is just "premature" as several have stated, please explain why
.

If your one of my parents turned on the air conditioner in the house my reptiles are kept because it was, what they thought, was too hot, I'd thank them. then go outside to turn it off because I know better that mid 80's are fine temp wise for my reptiles.

I'm saying he COMPLETELY jumped the gun, but posted in an attempt to WARN THE community of what HE FELT was important or critical, some what similar to people warning other of UFO'S, they honestly believe it to be true, the majority of people know its BS.

All im saying is imho he placed blame on the recent rodents he got, and immeidiatly posted his concerns, ONCE AGAIN a very poor decision, but I doubt he's the first person to jump to conclusions and go to extreme measures :shrug01:

But I'm fighting an uphill battle so ill depart, I apologize if my opinion is off topic and draw's negative feedback I just feel bad when people try to do something good and it back fires.

cheers
 
It seems like he was following the advice of his vet (stated that the worms came from the feeders, and could be from the frozen feeders). Yes, premature, but with good intentions, and following the advice of a professional.
 
Why didn't your Vet do fecals on the snakes? That doesn't make any sense. That should have been the first thing any Vet would do. Like was mentioned before. You can easily transfer microscopic parasite eggs with your hand while going from one cage to another. I don't believe for one minute you wash your hand after every snake or food item you are feeding.
 
I caught up on three pages and dont wanna multi quote everyone so if I miss ur question just PM me and Ill quote and post back on here. Sorry I havent been on much but I work wed-sat all day, and dont get much computer time in the summer when the rest of the family is off of school/work

Correct, my vet told me that it was extremely likely it was from my feeders. I didnt even think of it until she said it. Which is why I threw it up here so fast, im just trying to look out. Ill get the fecals done on the rats as soon as I have my animals medicated, and can get back up to a vet. Anywhere from Monday- next Monday. Ill have them do a necropsy on a rat or two if they think it will help, and if it aint gonna break my wallet.

Yes I religiously wash my hands between all and do have my hands peel from it. Btw my collection is 18. 2 boas and 16 balls.

They didnt do fecals on the snakes because they were able to look at living worms under a microscope. Yes they looked like brown rice and yes most of them floated.

At first it was just a few snakes, so I talked to a local guy who fixed them few up. But they continued to get worms and I noticed them spreading over the weeks. My first boa Ive had for fours years has never shown any signs of worms, health issues or what-not. She is in a seperate room from my breeders cuz shes my pet. None of her supplies come in contact with any of my other reptiles or their supplies but she still got them. The only common factor is the rats.

I honestly wanna be proven wrong and dont want to find any worms in the rats. I got a few hundred dollars worth of rats in my freezer and would hate to go through the trouble of replacing them. I buy in bulk so Ive only had like 3-4 orders to them over the year. I will post all test results when I have them. I entirely understand why u think I jumped the gun but a few people are starting to understand why I did it. If ur still upset about it, Im sorry but nuthin I say will make u happy. :shrug01:
 
if they look like rice, im thinkin they are more likely tapeworm segments.

have the vet do an actual fecal, so that they can (or they should) be able to look at the ova and identify it better and more accurately.
 
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