What is growing on my angel?

Kevin Kohn runs dd...call his office...I have his number and can pass it on...he is also on facebook...he is a terrific guy and always get back to you promptly...

I believe garlic is bad for fish...lots of strong evidence to support that- especially how it affects their liver...here is one report...I stopped using...buy many still do...

Here is one article...

OK I'm a no garlic for marine fish person.

Why?

Well firstly let me give you a little background on where I'm coming from, I'm a fish disease research scientist and I specialize in fish vaccination and ectoparasite infections in fish. I don't work for, sell or am I in anyway assciated with commerical fish food production. My research laboratory has carried out many trials for fish feed manufactures on garlic, both as an appetite stimulator, immunostimulant and white spot "œcure" and I shall link to some of this work published on UR and in the scientific literature.

So why not use garlic in marine fish diets.

1 Long term heart and liver lesions

Terrestrial plant lipids are well known to cause heart and liver lesions in marine fish. The problem with feeding terrestrial plant oils (not just garlic but any terrestrial plant oil) to reef fish is problematic due the nature of the lipids the fish do not possess the enzymes to digest them correctly and this leads to fatty deposits and serious pathological changes in the heart and liver of fish that are fed these lipids. Although these are not instantly fatal they cause chronic change to these organs and long term deterioration in the health of the fish. Granted much of this his work is done on farmed fish, but it is a well known phenomena and here are some of the research papers that detail this problem.

AH, Sargent JR, Thompson KD 1993
Terrestrial and fish oils affect phospholipid fatty acid composition, development of cardiac lesions, phospholipase activity and eicosanoid production in Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar).
Prostaglandins Leukot Essent Fatty Acids. 49(3):665-73

AH, Park MT, Sargent JR.1991.
High dietary linoleic acid affects the fatty acid compositions of individual phospholipids from tissues of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar): association with stress susceptibility and cardiac lesion.
J Nutr. 121(8):1163-72

J. Gordon Bell2, John McEvoy3, Douglas R. Tocher, Fiona McGhee, Patrick J. Campbell* and John R. Sargent 2004
Replacement of Fish Oil with Rapeseed Oil in Diets of Atlantic Salmon (Salmo salar) Affects Tissue Lipid Compositions and Hepatocyte Fatty Acid Metabolism
The American Society for Nutritional Sciences

J.G. Bell1, D.R. Tocher1, B.M. Farndale1, A.H. McVicar2 and J.R. Sargent1 1999
Effects of essential fatty acid-deficient diets on growth, mortality, tissue histopathology and fatty acid compositions in juvenile turbot (Scophthalmus maximus)
Journal Fish Physiology and Biochemistry 1573-5168 Volume 20, Number 3 p263-277

SL Seierstad, TT Poppe, EO Koppang, A Svindland, G 2005
Influence of dietary lipid composition on cardiac pathology in farmed Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar L
Journal of Fish Diseases.

These scientific journals detail the pathology and chronic changes due to these lipids (there are many more) but there aren't any on reef fish, mainly as they are not a major farmed species or laboratory model, however if you apply the precautionary principal to your fish (in the same way it is applied to Humans) then you wouldn't feed your marine fish diets containing terrestrial lipids. This has a human health comparison with Trans fats, very useful in making vegetable oils butter like so common in vegetable spreads and thought to be harmless until it turns out they cause liver tumors & heart disease in rats and mice and probably in humans too. So if this evidence is good enough to ban trans fats in foods then the much stronger data in fish should be good enough to ensure you don't feed terrestrial oils to reef fish. As I said earlier my lab (which is a fish health research lab at a leading University) is often asked to carry out feed trials for feed manufactures and we have carried out many that use garlic or garlic extracts. Unfortunately these are considered to be commercially sensitive and I cannot tell you the results of using them to control white spot (but suffice to say the companies we have carried out scientific trials have all decided not to launched garlic supplemented feeds). However I did persuade one feed manufacturer to allow me to post the growth data from their feed trial on UR. The results were, well, damning for garlic. Here is the link to the trial from my lab in this thread
http://www.ultimatereef.net/forums/s...d.php?t=230961 (http://www.ultimatereef.net/forums/s...d.php?t=230961)

Why do manufactures put it in their food? well clearly there is a demand for it and they are supplying that market demanded. It doesn't mean it good for your fish it just means that they will sell more of their food if people are misinformed and think it is beneficial

2 Garlic's Anti-parasitic Properties

The first question I have is please show me a research paper with proper controls where garlic has been shown to cure parasitic diseases in fish. I've just visited web of Science (a major research database) and there are no research papers that do this.

Much of the anti parasitic effects of garlic are attributed to Allacin and most work is done in humans, where it may have some benefits if purified allacin is fed, at around 400mg kg/bw every day. However in many mammals, (dogs, cats, horses etc) garlic causes a Heinz body anemia which is potentially fatal.

My laboratory has recently carried out a trial using purified allacin in clown fish

I recently picked up a MAEFS grant to look at this and the preliminary results are as follows The experiment was as follows

90 clown fish 40 on allicin, 40 not, 10 time zero samples. 10 sampled per week per group. The dose of allacin is 400ug/kg bw (a level used in humans and about 400ng/fish)

week 0 mean both groups 41.7% Hcrt
week 1 test 34.7% Hcrt control 42.4% Hcrt
week 2 test 18.8% Hcrt Controls 41.% Hcrt
week 3 test 17.2% Hcrt Controls 42.8% Hcrt
week 4 test 17.0% Hcrt Controls 40.6% Hcrt

Hcrt= haematocrit (how many red cells there are in the blood). The histology results on the organs hasn't been processed yet

Clearly allacin causes acute Heinz body anemia in reef fish too

To assume that all fish can eat garlic with no ill effects seems optimistic, when in mammals (which as a group are far more closely related to each other that fish are) it is fine for some e.g. the great apes, but toxic for dogs and cats (see O. Yamato, E. Kasai, T. Katsura, S. Takahashi, T. Shiota, M. Tajima, M. Yamasaki, and Y. Maede Heinz Body Hemolytic Anemia With Eccentrocytosis From Ingestion of Chinese Chive (Allium tuberosum) and Garlic (Allium sativum) in a Dog J. Am. Anim. Hosp. Assoc., January 1, 2005; 41(1): 68 - 73. (which is just one of 100's of research articles on this in the field))

Each year veterinarians have to treat 100's of cats and dogs for acute anaemia in the UK due to their owners feeding garlic to them. Simply because they read on a web it does wonders for their immune system, is anti worms etc. Yet these potentially fatal supplements are still widely available in the US/UK

http://www.pet-points.com/product_in...roducts_id=557 (http://www.pet-points.com/product_in...roducts_id=557)
http://www.mysimon.com/9015-10992_8-29572306.html (http://www.mysimon.com/9015-10992_8-29572306.html)

3 Well Garlic must be an immunostimulant

In the most recent review if immunostimulants in marine fish

Ian Bricknell & Roy A. Dalmo 2005
The use of immunostimulants in fish larval aquaculture
Fish & Shellfish Immunology 19 (5) 457-472

Garlic is not referred to as an immunostimulant.

To be honest garlic has been discussed many time on UR, if you want to feed your fish garlic then nothing is stopping you, but I doubt you will see a benefit and the evidence strongly suggests you will do short and long term harm to them.
 
Another update...

I contacted Kevin, as suggested, who responded immediately (wow, now that's great customer service!) and he also suggested removing the large cyst.

I tried to do this as quickly as possible with as little stress to the fish as possible. The cyst literally fell off immediately. I quickly returned the fish to the water and she is already eating again. I am continuing to do near daily water changes and feeding with vitamin soaked foods.

Fingers crossed she makes it! Thanks again for everyone's help here!

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Excellent news.Kevin is just one of those wonderful people that make this hobby enjoyable. Since you are doing such frequent water changes I'd suggest heavy frequent daily feedings to fatten the fish up.
 
Excellent news.Kevin is just one of those wonderful people that make this hobby enjoyable. Since you are doing such frequent water changes I'd suggest heavy frequent daily feedings to fatten the fish up.

I'm doing this too! though I still can't get her to take pellets or nori. She'll still only touch PE mysis...could be worse I guess!
 
Soak the nori in the water with the mysis so it will take on the flavor and smell of the food the fish already likes. I sometimes just fold the algae around the frozen food and put it in the tank that way. (I feed algae sheets using a small mesh bag that I made from the clear netting that is used to make a top for the tank.)
 
Forgot to add that you can also break up the nori into really small pieces, and add that along with spirulina and other flake food mixed in with the mysis. Let is soak for a bit so it all mushes together.
 
Soak the nori in the water with the mysis so it will take on the flavor and smell of the food the fish already likes. I sometimes just fold the algae around the frozen food and put it in the tank that way. (I feed algae sheets using a small mesh bag that I made from the clear netting that is used to make a top for the tank.)

Forgot to add that you can also break up the nori into really small pieces, and add that along with spirulina and other flake food mixed in with the mysis. Let is soak for a bit so it all mushes together.

Good thinking, thanks! Been trying this the past few days. No luck yet, but will continue to try.
 
Today marks 5 weeks of hyposalinity. Tomorrow I will start slowly raising the salinity back to normal levels, then about 4 weeks from now I will try adding both angels to my display tank, as long as she doesn't show anymore signs.

Her side seems to be healing up quite quickly. I'm pleased with the progress so far. She's also getting a little belly on her! :thumbsup:

Sorry for the bad pics, didn't have much luck tonight with them.

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definitely nothing to do with hlle. I know lymph is described as white or gray, and the top of the dorsal fin would be an expected location, but i'm not very familiar with seeing it on the middle of the body. I don't know why, but atlantic angels like queen and french seem to get lympho a lot more than others...

+1
 
She's looking great!! Nice big belly on her too (how often can a man say that sentence?) :)
 
I dealt with some strange fish diseases and lympho plenty, I've never seen it look like that... I'm not saying it isn't lympho, it just isn't like any I've seen.

What was the consistency of the growth that you removed from the fish? Jello? Or hard like cauliflower?
 
Good job! She looks way better!

She's looking great!! Nice big belly on her too (how often can a man say that sentence?) :)

She looks terrific..well done!

Thanks!

I dealt with some strange fish diseases and lympho plenty, I've never seen it look like that... I'm not saying it isn't lympho, it just isn't like any I've seen.

What was the consistency of the growth that you removed from the fish? Jello? Or hard like cauliflower?

It was on the harder side.
 
I have seen them on fins before and they do fall right off...so glad this worked out like it did...again, excellent job!
 
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