The sculpin
New member
I familiar with it (never done it). But I need to treat 10 fish and it seems it would be a lot of stress on them. I only have one fish with symptoms but I need to treat all ten correct?
Claud,
Thanks for sharingthe Sachem snippet.
"Metronidazole works best when used in a medicated food mix along with Focus and Garlic Guard. Focus will bind the medication to the food and add antibacterial properties. Garlic Guard enhances the flavor of the food mix, adds vitamin C, and the natural internal parasite removal properties of garlic. Putting in a food mix will keep the medication out of the water column and ensure the fish internalize the medication and better treatment results. While we do not market any of our medications as "reef/invert/plant safe," we have used the Metronidazole medicated food mix here in our saltwater tanks (with inverts and corals) at Seachem without any negative effects."
It doesn't make me warm and fuzzy about using it in a reef. I might feel better if they acutally took a stand on it or provided some data or at least left out the over statements on garlic guard. What intenal parasite removal properties are they talking about. There aren't any as far as I know.
It might be ok but it was discussed by several folks I trust a while ago and the consensus was against using it in a reef tank. I haven't seen any reports on success or reef safe applications so my opinion hasn't changed. I personally wouldn't risk it in a reef tank.
I had a post several weeks back about ich in my 120 gallon DT. I do not have a QT and had tried garlic to no effect. I treat Protozoan infections in Humans with Metronidazole and so, I went with the route documented in the above quote.
http://reefcentral.com/forums/showthread.php?t=2335880
Progress report:
So, after three weeks of a Blue Hippo being completely covered in ich in my DT and not having a QT, I tried a different (desperate) route.
I treated 5 days with Fishkeeper additive for Marine and Reef (made by Tropical Science), Seachem Metronidazole and Seachem Focus (Nitrofurantoin) along with Garlic Guard in their food at every feeding. I feed 3-5 times a day and added to both frozen and flake food. No one turned their nosed up at the medicated food.
The ich spots dissapperared 2 days into treatment. I used the Fish Keeper additive for 5 days and the Metronidazole and Focus for a total of 10 days.
This is a full reef tank (see the earlier post for pictures) with SPS, LPS, Gorgonians, and a LTA. There have been NO ILL EFFECTS to any of the reef inhabitants including my snails, hermit crabs and many ornamental shrimp.
It has now been 40+ days since completion of that therapy. There is no sign of ich. The tang is fatter and even more active than before. All the fish are still healthy and I did not have to treat the DT. I stopped the Metronidazole and Focus after 10 days. There has been no recurrence of spots after 3 solid weeks of heavy ich infestation of my Blue Tang.
I tested the tank by adding a One-spot Foxface 2 weeks ago. No recurrence of the ich and no signs of ich on the new fish.
I know this is not the recommended course of action but, it was just about my only recourse and, in this case, it worked well. The ich was constant and the poor tang was covered from head to tail every day with hundreds of white spots, never a day without spots for 3 weeks. Two days into this treatment he lost all of the spots. Ich is a protozoan and we use Metronidazole on humans to treat protozoan infections. It just made sense to try it in the food and it seems to be working.
I would not hesitate to use this method again of recommend to others to try even in a full reef tank.
I didn't say that copper working was faith. Yes, it works. I even said that there was no reason copper and tank transfer wouldn't work, so we can assume they work.
But the fact that it worked in your tank is faith. Until you've thoroughly examined every single fish in the tank, multiple times, with a microscope, you are going on faith that you ran the treatment correctly. You are going on faith that the treatment worked.
Sure, your method is much more proven. Well, actually, the only methods really proven to work. But your judgement for whether it worked is no different then the unproven methods. You are still relying on the fact that you don't visually see ich in the tank.
Which is why there are cases of people using copper and still getting ich in their tank. Because while copper and tank transfer are technically 100% effective, they are only as good as the person administering the treatment.
Well stated and to the point. Thanks
It's been a time honored tradition in other fields for thousands of years. No reason it shouldn't be equally effective here. :crazy1:Naked dancing and chicken bones cannot claim the same merit.
There is actually a very easy test to see whether all fish were cured of Ich. Throw an Achilles in there.
Adam,
Setting aside my concerns about reef safe for the moment , the potential for metronidazole is interesting for qt tank treatments . I wasn't able to find anything defining cryptocryon irritans as aerobic or anaerobic.
While it's clear the free swimming phases are in oxic water, the encysting could provide hypoxic or anoxic areas for tomites to grow.
Perhaps the acutal paarsitic phase embedded in the epithilium acts anaerobiclly. The med is described as having good tissue penetration but I don't know if those pockets in the epitheium the parisite burows into to feed are hypoxic or not.
What do you think?