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Impactions - Post 'Em Up!

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  • 06-10-2010, 10:46 AM
    Skiploder
    Impactions - Post 'Em Up!
    So, while we're tackling oft heard yet never substantiated snake advice, I'd like to poilitely ask for some of you to take the time to address another topic:

    Substrate caused impactions.

    Now I have heard first hand accounts of impactions in very young snakes (although I have never experienced one in my snakes) but have never heard of nor seen a substantiated case of an adult snake suffering from a substrate-caused impaction.

    We have all seen it come up in thread after thread discussing both substrates and the pros and cons of feeding in a separate enclosure, yet the warnings seem to far outpace the actual cases. In fact, I would need a calculator to add up all the warnings regarding ingested substrate and compactions on this site alone, yet could count all of the actual incidences on a closed fist.

    My own personal experience is this - I have fed snakes for many moons on a variety of loose subsrates from pine to fir to aspen to coconut noir. I have had snakes roll their prey in shavings and consume a mouthful of wood countless times with no adverse digestion-related effects. The only incident I had was a fur and wood "booger" blocking a genetically narrowed lacrimal duct.

    So here's a chance to post your experiences with substrate-caused intestinal impactions. First hand accounts only and if you had an animal that died of an impaction, did you confirm it with an actual necropsy. The one or two cases I heard of in adult snakes were never confirmed in this manner. Without positive confirmation, it don't count.

    Over the years I have asked a couple of dedicated herp vets about this subject as it pertains to adult snakes and have had only one of three vets confirm one actual case - and it came with a caveat. It was in an animal that was already suffering from a thickening of the stomach and intestinal lining from a primary disease. All three pretty much confirmed that they are extremely rare if not almost non-existent.

    So that begs the question - whay are so many people ready to jump in and warn against something that may be rarer than rare? Let's see those ingested substrate horror stories.
  • 06-10-2010, 12:02 PM
    Beardedragon
    Re: Impactions - Post 'Em Up!
    I have not once been warned against impaction in snakes, so I have nothing to add.

    Quote:

    So that begs the question - whay are so many people ready to jump in and warn against something that may be rarer than rare? Let's see those ingested substrate horror stories
    I cant really agree that this is a problem worth bringing up, being that in my five odd years of snake keeping, the only substrate warning I have gotten was to not use Cedor.

    Impaction, and problems related to eating a piece of substrate ( Like the ripping of the lining of their digestive track) are totally different things, I would have titled this differently because that to me would seem more like a problem.

    What I am saying here is that I agree with you... Impaction has not nor will ever cloud my mind when it comes to choosing a substrate for my snakes.
  • 06-10-2010, 01:15 PM
    MustBeSatan
    Re: Impactions - Post 'Em Up!
    I've heard this alot... I'm not sure how Beardedragon has never heard it but who knows. The biggest substrate/impaction risk I hear about is keeping reptiles on sand, but I have also heard about aspen, cocoa fibre, even the recycled paper I use as impaction risks. I've never really bought into it; if they can digest bones, a little bit of paper is probably not going to ravage their digestive tract...

    Never had a problem personally, but I've only had the BP's for a year. Kingsnake on coconut fibre for... 7 years? 7 or 8... And again, no issues, and she has definately eaten her fair share of it (stuff sticks to a wet mouse like crap on velcro...)

    Also never seen a substrate-induced impaction in my 3 years at a major pet store, even with the animals on sand... So...


    Edit: Just wanted to thank you, Skiploder, for making these posts. So... Thanks!
  • 06-10-2010, 01:25 PM
    jfreels
    Re: Impactions - Post 'Em Up!
    I do not have any first hand experience and would believe that if they can digest teeth, jawbones, nails and hair, then fiber should be no issue.

    On another forum I use to frequent, there was a thread with pictures of a neonate that swallowed a wood chip which was much wider than itself. On it's way down, it went crooked. The general consensus of the forum was to get to a vet ASAP so it could be surgically removed and if that was not done, the snake would surely die of impaction. Instead of following the forums advice, the owner massaged it so it was going down square. On top of that, he fed the snake.

    That member caught all hell for doing that and was told the snake would die.

    I think that was the gist of it. In any event, the snake was just fine. I'll see if I can dig up that thread if anyone wants to see it.
  • 06-10-2010, 01:45 PM
    Skiploder
    Re: Impactions - Post 'Em Up!
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Beardedragon View Post
    I have not once been warned against impaction in snakes, so I have nothing to add.



    I cant really agree that this is a problem worth bringing up, being that in my five odd years of snake keeping, the only substrate warning I have gotten was to not use Cedor.

    Impaction, and problems related to eating a piece of substrate ( Like the ripping of the lining of their digestive track) are totally different things, I would have titled this differently because that to me would seem more like a problem.

    What I am saying here is that I agree with you... Impaction has not nor will ever cloud my mind when it comes to choosing a substrate for my snakes.

    It can cover both items. Call it being covered under the umbrella of ingesting substrate.

    It's a red flag people wave but no one seems to have an issue with it in adult snakes.

    So why does it come up?
  • 06-10-2010, 01:46 PM
    jfreels
    Re: Impactions - Post 'Em Up!
    Here's the thread I talked about above. The member was instructed by another member to massage the bark down.

    http://www.cornsnakes.com/forums/sho...ight=impaction
  • 06-10-2010, 01:49 PM
    Skiploder
    Re: Impactions - Post 'Em Up!
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by jfreels View Post
    Here's the thread I talked about above. The member was instructed by another member to massage the bark down.

    http://www.cornsnakes.com/forums/sho...ight=impaction

    I've seen reliable reports of impactions in smaller neonates.

    I think this is a good link, but I'd love to see some for adults.
  • 06-10-2010, 02:04 PM
    Skiploder
    Re: Impactions - Post 'Em Up!
  • 06-10-2010, 02:15 PM
    Beardedragon
    Re: Impactions - Post 'Em Up!
    I stand corrected, Im very surprised that I have yet to stumble across the subject being a member here for so long... My normal deffinition of impaction though is a (normally by a lizard) Build up of substrate over time blocking the digestion track, causeing pressure on the spine and eventually leading to paralization, if they live long enough for that to happen.

    Ignore my first post everyone, my bad :oops: My train of thoughts were of that, not just eating one big peice.
  • 06-10-2010, 04:33 PM
    WingedWolfPsion
    Re: Impactions - Post 'Em Up!
    Never had this issue. I bred leopard geckos almost a decade ago, and did keep the adults on sand--never had an issue with them, either.

    Impaction is where the foreign particulate substance is built up to the point where it is blocking the intestinal tract, and will not move. It is a form of intestinal blockage.

    Sand impaction isn't specific just to reptiles, but other animals may, for similarly inexplicable reasons, decide to eat sand as well.

    http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1482454/

    I wouldn't keep leopard geckos on sand today, but some species still require particulate substrates (such as Nephrurus). Some reptiles DO live on sand in the wild, and one would think are unlikely to engage in this self-destructive behavior.
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