Popeye? Is there a doctor in the house?

MJAnderson

Premium Member
I searched for 'popeye' on RC but that doesn't seem to be what my chromi has. It looks like he has an airbubble stuck to the corner/top of his eye. The eye itself isn't swollen or discolored.

Any thoughts? Injury? All of the other fish look healthy.
 
Yeah thats popeye. Have you netted him lately? Nets tend to rub on a fish's eyes.....same thing happened to my Flame Angel.....he never recovered. =( I would quarantine him and treat with melafix or other meds.
 
Mike I am currently treating a fish which has an eye problem, popeye/ulcer ? I seem to be having results with Maracyn-two. been two days and swelling has gone down by half. HTH
 
Oddly enough it seems to come and go. I had seen it before then I would have sworn it was gone but when I saw it again I figured I just missed it. Odd thing is it's gone again today. I caught him and put him in my fuge just in case it's an injury. Sadly right now my hospital tank is full or curing LR.
 
What you are describing sounds like "gas bubble disease" rather than popeye. Popeye is basically the entire eyeball swollen/enlarged, or pushed forward by a swelling behind it.

Gas bubble disease is diagnosed by the finding bubbles (air emboli) within the blood vessels, gills, and eyes of fish. One possible cause is the supersaturation of the water with any gas (nitrogen, oxygen, or carbon dioxide most commonly)--in other words more gas dissolved in the water than it normally holds.

What causes gas supersaturation of the water? Pump cavitation can do this. Do you have a closed loop on your tank? I have heard that this can be a problem with them, esp if the output diameter is too small.

Some heavily planted freshwater tanks have a problem with oxygen supersaturation.

Treatment? Moving the fish to a tank with normal levels of dissolved gases, while correcting the source of gas supersaturation.

Other factors may contribute to the foration of oxygen bubbles--what are your tank parameters? I found a reference that suggested that high temp and alkalinity can contribute to this problem. Do you have lots of microbubbles in your tank, esp ones that stick to surfaces?
 
Oddly enough I do. I have a problem with bubble algae so I've been doing a ton of cleaning/water changes lately, exposing my pumps and kicking out a ton of bubbles.

Temp is 80 and Alk is around 9, never over 10.

Thanks for the insight.
 
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