IMHO, my case is not applicable to you. I was simply saying that inactivity is usually a sign of some disease, but it can be absolutely anything: a bacterial infection, a gill problem (like ich in gills), oxygen deprivation, or the late stage of serious internal parasite disease.........TammyLiz wrote:Mike, you said the one that was inactive and later died had a bacterial infection. Is that something I should treat for just in case in your opinion?
I'm really wishing I could have quarantined. I just had a feeling... What a bummer.
In my case it was a bacterial infection in lymph nodes, maracyn did not do anything good, TC killed the bacteria all right, but the loach was already so far gone that it died a couple of days later anyway. I've seen something very similar with gf once, but this is not a common disease.
Anyway, I'd say don't treat for bacteria now. You have no evidence that this is a problem, it is most likely not, and you don't want to risk your cycling on top of the ich problem.---you have no tank to evacuate to in he worst case.
Yes. It speeds up the ich life cycle and makes the meds (and salt) do their jobs faster. Read the LL faq on Ich on TFF, or any other paper on ich if you want to see why. It makes the meds work better even if the med label says that temp raise is not needed (like with my IchGuard).So the higher temp is pretty important?
What was done, was done. Ich can be beaten, if you do things right now.I'm really wishing I could have quarantined. I just had a feeling... What a bummer.
What is the situation now? Ich signs, fish behavior, meds applied? Remember to keep checking your Odessa's fins/tail, ich would be very visible on them.
Good luck.