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I want to feed metro and focus to my clowns. I have observed white stringy poop. Unfortunitely i didnt see any of this during the month i had them in QT. They have now been in DT for 3 weeks, i wanted to see if the poop continued to stay white and stringy and it has. I have metro and focus should arive this week. My question is if feeding metro has any effect on bio filter? My DT is only a few months old. Should i be concerned with ammonia spikes from the metro food? I run a small bag of carbon...
So long as you use Focus to bind the medication, it should have no impact on your biofilter. Even if a little does leach out, metro only targets anaerobic bacteria (I believe.)
Thanks a lot for this writeup on Metronidazole @Humblefish. I have a question, or perhaps correction, about this antibiotic. Whenever I chime in on these things my frame of reference is human use and disease so I certainly may not be aware of something that is effective in the hobby but isn't used or effective in humans. When I think of Metronidazole, I think of Giardia, Entomoeba, Trichomonas, Gardnerella vaginalis, Anerobes, and H. pylori. Metronidazole is used for/effective in treating certain intestinal parasitic infections, but not ones caused by worms as far as I know. As I've been reading R2R I've seen Metro suggested for internal worm infections many times by many people...but I've never known this drug to be used for killing or treating intestinal worm diseases. I've known it to be used for parasites that are protozoan. I REALLY enjoy reading and learning from all the posts that you and others make regarding fish disease, so thank you very much for this thread and all the others.
As an aside, from a practical standpoint, I can imagine it not making a big difference when treating fish because, as hobbyists, we don't have the luxury of knowing exactly what our sick fish is infected with...we just see its belly, poop, perhaps some wasting, and decide there could be an internal parasitic infection, then begin treating it with whatever options we have, so in that sense it might not exactly matter if the drug we're reaching for treats parasitic intestinal worms or parasitic protozoans...but if you had some reason to confidently suspect worms, then metro would not be an effective choice (again, as far as I know).
I guess I tend to (incorrectly) use the terms "internal parasites" & "intestinal worms" interchangeably. Metro targets internal flagellates, specifically diplomonads. The best example probably being Hexamita. For "true worms" the best solution is probably praziquantel, levamisole or fenbendazole. I have been meaning to rewrite many of the stickies as I gain a greater understanding/more experience.