Hole in the head Help!!!

fupakiller

AC Members
Feb 2, 2005
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Alta Loma, CA.
I have a friend who now for the 2nd time has had her second set of oscars get hole in the head....
My question is what is the cause of HITH......
And what is the cure for it...

Thanks for any help


Fupa
 
As I understand it, it is caused by a parasite called "hexamita". I really don't know the specifics, but I should, b/c I have gone through it with my fish once. I got "Hole-N-Head Guard" from Jungle, followed the directions on the jar, and it really worked.

I'm pretty sure I know why I had the problem. I used to feed my predatory fish exclusively on feeder goldfish from the pet store. I also went through a period in which I quite honestly "slacked off" on my water changes. Probably went more than 2 weeks btw 25% changes sometimes, and I paid the price. Now I change 75% of the water in my predator tanks at least once a week, and have weaned my fish on a diet consisting mostly of shrimp from the grocery store.

Oh, and the fish? Alive and healthy. The medication worked, and I caught it very early. No one I know since has even noticed the few very small holes that remain. I do not believe that it will ever heal completely (it's been ~3 years since the incident).
 
most common cause for HITH is poor water conditions.

What size tank does she have these Oscars in? How big are the Oscars themselves? You need a MINIMUM of 50g per Oscars when adult so if she's planning to house these 2 fish together she'll need (eventually if not now) a minimum 100g tank ... 120 is better. Bigger is better with these fish.

Treatment for HITH I've heard lots of things ... personally I did a bunch of water changes while I cycled a bigger tank and treated with Melfix. Now my O is in a 50 g breeder tank with his pictus cat buddy and a pleco. Ideally I will have to get him a bigger tank but he's 4-5 inches right now so I should have a bout a year or so before that next move. Also, there's no such thing as too much filtration for these guys. I have a canister filter big enough for a 75g tanks on my 50g right now and I could actually use another one of these.

Hope this helps you some.
 
Although Hexamita is often found on fish with HITH, It's pretty well accepted that the parasite is not the cause since killing the parasite will not stop the disease. Poor water quality and lack of nutrition are the two most substantiated theories for this disease. Make sure the tank is big enough, weekly medium to high volume water changes, careful feeding and good nutrition. I also reccomend supplementing with liquid multivitamins Daily for fish that already have HITH, 2x per week for fish that are healthy, but prone to it. Stay clear of Goldfish completely, if you like live feeders (I do) use ghost shrimp or guppies properly quarantined or home grown, I would never reccomend bringing anything home from the LFS and dropping it in your main tank even if you really trust your LFS.
Here is a really good article that you should read, and print for your friend as well.
http://www.aaquaria.com/aquasource/hith.shtml

HTH
Dave
 
I've read that stray current from malfunctioning equiptment could also be a cause for HITH. A multimeter could detect this problem and an aquarium grounding probe would relieve the stress. I have a grounding probe in my tanks just in case,they only cost about $10..
 
Symptoms

The main symptom of this disease is the small pits, mainly on the head, which give the disease its name. These are usually whitish in colour, and there may be yellowish mucus trailing from them. The fish may also stop feeding and become hollow bellied.

The disease affects mainly cichlids, particularly oscars and discus, but can also affect gouramies.

Causes

The disease is linked with a protozoan parasite, Hexamita (sometimes known as Octomitus). This may often be present at low levels in fish, but the acute infection does not occur unless factors like poor water quality or poor diet have an influence. Therefore, Hexamita alone may not be the primary cause, and good water quality and a varied diet should prevent this disease occuring.

Possible cures

The fish can be treated by isolating to a separate tank and adding either Dimetridazole (5 mg/litre) or Metronidazole (7 mg/litre). In some countries (including the UK), these are only likely to be available via veterinary prescription. The treatment will probably need to be repeated a few days apart, with a 20-30% water change between each treatment. Medicated food is useful for treatment, but this can be problematic if the fish is not feeding. Direct injection near the affected area is likely to prove very effective, but should only be attempted by an appropriately qualified person. In the UK, Waterlife Octozin may also be used for HITH disease.
 
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