Body sores can first appear as red patches which can result in scale loss and open sores that expose the goldfishes flesh and muscles.
You should swab the sores with hydrogen peroxide or potassium permanganate. Then add a salt solution of 0.3% concentration to promote protective slime coat growth and healing of the sores. Go to the pet store and ask the fish expert about what treatments to buy for body sores.
Your goldfish is suffering from exophthalmos also known as pop-eye. Pop-eye can be caused from bacterial infections, tumors, or bad water quality.
Yes. You can get tumors on the face and you do get them there. You can get tumors practically every where in your body.
The difference between papilloma tumors and papilloma skin tumors is that papilloma tumors are not cancerous. Papilloma skin tumors have the ability to become cancerous over time.
Some common breeds of goldfish are: the Black Moor goldfish, the Ryunkin goldfish, the comet goldfish, the common goldfish, the Calico Fantail goldfish, the telescope eye goldfish, the bubble eye goldfish, the pearl scale goldfish and the Oranda goldfish.
yes, dogs get tumors.
* brain tumors and facalie tumors
Tumors that initially arise and grow within the brain are termed primary tumors
Benign tumors (non-cancerous) such as brain tumors.
There are several different kind of tumors that ferrets can get - Insulinomas, Lymphosarcoma, Adrenal Gland Cancer, Skin tumors Depending on the type of cell that becomes cancerous, some of the common ones are fibromas and fibrosarcomas (tumors of the connective tissue), adenomas and adenocarcinomas (tumors of skin glands), mast cell tumors, hemangiomas (tumors of blood vessels) and basal cell tumors.
Benign tumors are usually encapsulated.
No you cannot put a frog with goldfish; goldfish belong with goldfish
Umm... make the tumors bigger?