heatwave
Certified Herp-a-holic
There are also visible lumps, which is why I first thought she was gravid. .
Yea.... if multiple lumps are palpatable and they arent like "hips" (fat deposits by the tail) Im going to guess retained eggs.
There are also visible lumps, which is why I first thought she was gravid. .
The thing about the lumps is that they aren't hard or anything, and they're not in any specific location. They move around as you hold her in different positions, sometimes being closer to her neck. It's more like her stomach is bumpy in places. I was thinking gravid, then possibly gas, then maybe a blockage. Her stomach has been getting larger over the past few months, but I chalked it up to normal growth since there didn't seem to be anything wrong (she wasn't bloated, just a little squishy on her underbelly). Could gravid snakes live that long with the problem not being treated? I mean, could she have been egg-bound for months prior to this?
I found these listings, but they are from 2006 so not sure they are still good:
Deborah L. Wiggins, DVM
Family Pet Wellness Clinic
8501 W. Franklin Road
Boise, ID 83709
Tel: (208) 377-9009
Mike Koob, DVM
All Pet Complex
6712 Glenwood
Boise, ID 83703
Tel: (208) 853-1000
Intermountain Pet Hospital
800 W. Overland Rd.
Meridian
208-888-2910
* Seth Trachtenberg
Prairie Animal Hospital
920 West Prairie Avenue
Coeur D Alene 83815
208-772-3214
http://idahovethospital.com/our-services/
First off, sorry to say this but she's seriously overweight. See how small her head looks compared to her body? Corns should be slender and muscular, whereas she's more of a ball python shape. Cutting back down to mice will really help though, once she's feeding again I'd suggest one large adult mouse every 2 weeks would be a good starting point for her. She should lose the extra weight gradually and be more active, but she may well end up with those stubborn deposits ('hips') becoming visible as the rest of her slims down.
The squishy lumps you could feel sound more like ovulation, some females get quite swollen as the egg mass develops, and as she's not very toned it may explain why you could feel the lumps. The good news is that if it is just follicles, she may well reabsorb them without trouble. If she does go on to develop slugs (unfertilised eggs), having her more active and toned will help her to lay them. Cutting down her feeding and getting her out to crawl about and exercise more (up and down stairs is good exercise) will help.
If you do go on to suspect she's egg-bound, please don't go to your present vet, as suggesting euthanasia for something that could be as simple as ovulation or constipation is, I'd say, extreme!
Was there visible bruising before you took her to the vet? If not, is it a result of the vet's examination?
First off, sorry to say this but she's seriously overweight. See how small her head looks compared to her body? Corns should be slender and muscular, whereas she's more of a ball python shape. Cutting back down to mice will really help though, once she's feeding again I'd suggest one large adult mouse every 2 weeks would be a good starting point for her. She should lose the extra weight gradually and be more active, but she may well end up with those stubborn deposits ('hips') becoming visible as the rest of her slims down.
The squishy lumps you could feel sound more like ovulation, some females get quite swollen as the egg mass develops, and as she's not very toned it may explain why you could feel the lumps. The good news is that if it is just follicles, she may well reabsorb them without trouble. If she does go on to develop slugs (unfertilised eggs), having her more active and toned will help her to lay them. Cutting down her feeding and getting her out to crawl about and exercise more (up and down stairs is good exercise) will help.
If you do go on to suspect she's egg-bound, please don't go to your present vet, as suggesting euthanasia for something that could be as simple as ovulation or constipation is, I'd say, extreme!
Was there visible bruising before you took her to the vet? If not, is it a result of the vet's examination?
Unfortunately, even if she needs surgery, it's probably not in our budget. My husband and I decided on a $350 limit for this. We really can't afford more at this point in time due to my recent decline in health and ridiculous hospital bills. I hate to be the person who lets an animal that could get better be euthanized because of budget constraints, but here I am. Before that though, if the vets can't help her, I'll try the diet and exercise bit and see if she improves. Euthanasia will be a last resort and will depend on her quality of life.
I really wouldnt be worrying about surgery right now. She doesnt look at all like shes on deaths door, and if shes really only just stopped eating...have you googled pictures of egg bound females on deaths door? it aint pretty. In your pictures she looks alert and (albeit a chunky monkey) just a little distended.
Take a deep breath
Squeeze as much info out of the vet you took her to as possible. You paid her, you deserve it.
Keep us updated and hopefully more people will chime in here. Heck if you get her x-rays post them here! Maybe someone here has been through the exact same thing and can help more with the images.
She can go several weeks without food, she wont starve!
Unless it comes out that she is in massive pain, has inoperable malignant tumors, or is belly up in her viv gasping for air, I personally wouldn't think about euthenasia. I think that vet was pretty irresponsible for even putting it in your head.
You got lots of good ideas to go from here- so keep calm and slither on! And keep us posted!
I needed to hear this before going to bed, thanks. It's 3:40 am and I'm exhausted.
Someone posted pics here of a grossly overweight Corn that they'd rescued (couple of years ago, sorry I can't find the thread). The poor snake looked like a sock filled with pool balls. The lumps were just extreme and uneven fat deposits. That certainly matches your description, if not her exact appearance. If the problem was that she was gravid and eggbound, then I'd expect more extreme swelling in her lower third. As it seems like the effect is all over her body, then I'd be more wary of thinking about eggbinding. Having said that, it might just be difficult to tell with a deep layer of fat all over her.She feels like a balloon and if you lift her up by her front end you can see the bulge slide down. There are also visible lumps, which is why I first thought she was gravid.