rejohnson53
New member
My snake has recently been recovering from a parasitic infection which she was treated for by the vet. Right before bringing her to the vet for diagnosis, I had noticed two small lumps in her stomach area. The vet told me that she was not impacted, and that the lumps were likely gas bubbles, nothing to worry myself about. She had lost a lot of weight over the 2 months of illness, and the vet told me to work her back up from f/t pinkies since it had been so long since she had eaten.
I noticed that her belly would get a larger lump than I would have expected each time she ate, but she was passing feces which looked healthy, mostly several small deposits over the course of the week instead of one large pile. 8 days ago I fed her her 3rd hopper since her recovery started. She ate it like she was starving, and developed a HUGE lump in her belly.
She threw it up the next day. This week she has thrown up three times and pooped twice. She stays on the cold side of the tank and will flee from the heat pad whenever I try to move her to warm her up, even though it's only 92 F over the pad. (Her warm and cold hides are identical flower pots.) The lump in her belly is still huge. I took these pictures with my phone (sorry, she was REALLY squirming):
Also, she flinches when I touch her, abnormal behavior for her.
I'm worried about trying to feed her within the next few days, but I'm still trying to get her back to a healthy weight. Should I see if she can keep a pink down? I am not giving NutriBac yet because I have never used it before, but I can get some if you guys recommend it. All I'm doing right now is changing her water and checking on her every day, and hoping. I'll take her back to the vet if she doesn't improve, but she was there 3 weeks ago for a follow up and they saw nothing wrong with her. It has me very confused.
Please please please, any advice as to what to do next would be greatly appreciated!
Snake age: Unknown, less than 2 years.
Length: 34 inches at last measurement.
Weight: 90g (at her most underweight right before recieving parasite treatment. Haven't gotten her weighed in a few weeks, but she's a bit heavier now.)
Morph: Snow
Habitat: 20 gal glass aquarium with screen top, aspen shavings substrate. 2 hides, UTH and heat lamp (for the winter).
I noticed that her belly would get a larger lump than I would have expected each time she ate, but she was passing feces which looked healthy, mostly several small deposits over the course of the week instead of one large pile. 8 days ago I fed her her 3rd hopper since her recovery started. She ate it like she was starving, and developed a HUGE lump in her belly.
She threw it up the next day. This week she has thrown up three times and pooped twice. She stays on the cold side of the tank and will flee from the heat pad whenever I try to move her to warm her up, even though it's only 92 F over the pad. (Her warm and cold hides are identical flower pots.) The lump in her belly is still huge. I took these pictures with my phone (sorry, she was REALLY squirming):




Also, she flinches when I touch her, abnormal behavior for her.
I'm worried about trying to feed her within the next few days, but I'm still trying to get her back to a healthy weight. Should I see if she can keep a pink down? I am not giving NutriBac yet because I have never used it before, but I can get some if you guys recommend it. All I'm doing right now is changing her water and checking on her every day, and hoping. I'll take her back to the vet if she doesn't improve, but she was there 3 weeks ago for a follow up and they saw nothing wrong with her. It has me very confused.
Please please please, any advice as to what to do next would be greatly appreciated!
Snake age: Unknown, less than 2 years.
Length: 34 inches at last measurement.
Weight: 90g (at her most underweight right before recieving parasite treatment. Haven't gotten her weighed in a few weeks, but she's a bit heavier now.)
Morph: Snow
Habitat: 20 gal glass aquarium with screen top, aspen shavings substrate. 2 hides, UTH and heat lamp (for the winter).