» Site Navigation
1 members and 605 guests
Most users ever online was 47,180, 07-16-2025 at 05:30 PM.
» Today's Birthdays
» Stats
Members: 75,899
Threads: 249,095
Posts: 2,572,066
Top Poster: JLC (31,651)
|
-
Registered User
-
-
Registered User
Re: Blood on shed and paper towel, but no visible cuts??
My ball python had a shed once where rhe tip of her tail was bleeding but it’s nothing to really worry about. Bleeding (bit) after shed is normal but if it’s substantial blood, i would take em to the vet. Also the shed on the top of the head (sometimes) happens to my ball python too. I don’t exactly know why but my guess is a humidity issue. Im sure someone else can answer that for the both of us lmao
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
-
-
When they shed the skin that detached from the cloaca will often cause a small bleed, nothing abnormal.
-
The Following 11 Users Say Thank You to Stewart_Reptiles For This Useful Post:
- + Show/Hide list of the thanked
-
Armiyana (08-08-2018),Bogertophis (08-07-2018),C.Marie (08-07-2018),Craiga 01453 (08-07-2018),dakski (08-07-2018),dr del (08-07-2018),Greg Nel (08-10-2018),Jessimoo (08-08-2018),Lord Sorril (08-08-2018),richardhind1972 (08-07-2018),Sonny1318 (08-06-2018)
-
I believe those funny looking scales (that look as though they didn't shed, but they did) are a (minor) fungal infection on the skin- get a topical treatment from
vet & follow directions. Otherwise, it will spread. Excess humidity might be part of the issue, so check your enclosure levels.
-
-
Re: Blood on shed and paper towel, but no visible cuts??
Yeah, if all the old skin came off in the shed, I totally agree with Deborah, and have that issue with my BP too.
Shayna, my 6 year old BP, has perfect sheds 95% of the time, but I still see a little blood from her vent area almost every shed. Such a small amount, doesn't seem to bother her too much, and she has no other symptoms, so I don't worry. It's just something that happens. Shayna seems to do it most sheds for the past 4-5 years.
-
-
Re: Blood on shed and paper towel, but no visible cuts??
 Originally Posted by Deborah
When they shed the skin that detached from the cloaca will often cause a small bleed, nothing abnormal.
Like Deborah said, bleeding from the cloaca is common and as long as it's not a lot, is perfectly normal and nothing to worry about.
 Originally Posted by Esai
My ball python had a shed once where rhe tip of her tail was bleeding but it’s nothing to really worry about. Bleeding (bit) after shed is normal but if it’s substantial blood, i would take em to the vet. Also the shed on the top of the head (sometimes) happens to my ball python too. I don’t exactly know why but my guess is a humidity issue. Im sure someone else can answer that for the both of us lmao
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Bleeding from the tail tip, however, is not normal.
-
-
Registered User
Re: Blood on shed and paper towel, but no visible cuts??
Thank you for all the replies! It gave me some peace of mind now that I know it's a common occurrence. 
 Originally Posted by Bogertophis
I believe those funny looking scales (that look as though they didn't shed, but they did) are a (minor) fungal infection on the skin- get a topical treatment from
vet & follow directions. Otherwise, it will spread. Excess humidity might be part of the issue, so check your enclosure levels.
I didn't know ball pythons got fungal infections (only heard of RIs); her hot spot is at ~87-91 degrees with the cool side at ~78-81 degrees and the humidity has been at about 75-80% because she was in shed if that helps any?
Does anyone have any other opinions on what's going on with her head scales in the 3rd pic I posted?
I'll be keeping an eye on it and see if anything on the scales changes or if her behavior changes in the next week or so. I need to schedule a vet appointment for my other bp anyways since he's due for a check up.
-
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
|