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News on Yellow Fungus Disease and a request for help from the DB community

CheriS Sep 27, 2003 02:11 PM

Yellow Fungus Disease

A man at the University of Wisconsin who is a Doctor and Researcher has committed to apply for funding and grants to study and develop treatment for what is commonly called Yellow Fungus Disease (YFD) a malady that is affecting reptiles and found in bearded dragons more than any species we are aware of at this time.

Research is reptiles is rare and in the species pogona almost unheard of, we as owners and breeders of them are very fortunate to have a man of this expertise willing to undertake such a study and find effective treatment and cure. From 5 dragons he has already studied, he has identified the causing fungus in each, a huge step forward in the treatment and cure of it.

YFD is little understood or recognized by the Veterinarian or medical community. Few have experience with it or recognize what it is. Veterinarian are seeing it in isolated cases and many times failing to know what it is as it does not culture like normal fungi. With the growing popularity of dragons in the United States and owners willingness to seek medical attention now, more cases are being reported and observed, but it is still misdiagnosed and mistreated or the treatments so harsh on reptiles with it internally that the success rate is poor.

He is asking for help in preparing the grant request and this is where we all can pitch and assist. He needs information for writing his grant request. Things we all have seen or know. Below is a list of things that you can help with now.

1. We need articles or documentation of the growing popularity of bearded dragons.

2. We need statistic and sources that could give us an estimate of the number of bearded dragons bred and/or sold every year in the US

3. Pogona_diseases list on Yahoo can supply him with some statistic of infected dragons, but we need more if anyone knows of any.

4. We need any pictures anyone has of dragons with yellow discolorations or lesions and consent for those to be used in grant request and for him to use them in publications

5. We need medical history logs of any dragons that had yellow skin discoloration or lesions or Written statements from Veterinarian that have experienced this, owner‘s letter also.

6. He needs to be able to assure the committees that review the request that he can obtain animals suffering with this for study and treatment. If you have it in any or your colony, would you be willing to donate or sell animals for study and treatment knowing that this can and will make a difference for all in the future.

Deadline for the pre-proposal is November 3rd for one request, so he needs to get going on this.

In the future, he will need live animals that have this to study and develop treatment. He will also accept animals that had this and did not survive to study, if you have lost any or lose any with these symptoms, please store the body until they are set up to receive them for necropsy. There will be no cost to the owners as they will be donated to medical research.

We can also help him stretch those funding dollars by asking reptile industry supplies to donate supplies for set ups, lights, furnishings, crickets, pellets. These can be set directly to the University. These animals will receive good husbandry care and he has a resident that works with him. He and his wife also have bearded dragons as his own pets at home so he is knowledgeable in their care and needs. If you know suppliers or are a supplier please think about donating items to this very worthwhile cause.

We will set up a site that acknowledges all that help contribute to this research and to pool information and ask all owners and breeders that have websites to link to it or put a page on their site regarding this research on theirs also. This is a chance for a community to pull together and let researchers know that we are caring people and appreciate the time and effort they put into helping us take better care of the species we love.

I want to add one quote from a breeder that has been dealing with this as she makes a very good point:
I think it should be made VERY clear to everyone who is or might be exposed to this that it is VERY VERY contagious from lizard to lizard

It is , it can also be passed from human hands to another dragon, furnishings, soil or direct contact with anyone that has it in their colony. We also suspect that it can be passed from an infected mother to the eggs as some hatchling have shown up with it very early with no contact with other dragons

Thank you all for taking the time to read this very lengthy but important article. I for one am very grateful to have someone of his expertise willing to work on this ans am wiling to help in any way I can. You can email me at cheri@reptilerooms.com

Replies (5)

veronicag Sep 27, 2003 05:30 PM

Do you remember Mo? She's still got the YFD - we just can't seem to get it to go away - especially from around her eye. We have lots of photos and good documentation on the various meds and topicals we have tried and whether or not they made a difference.

I am so grateful that someone is willing to put this kind of research together. YFD is definately a huge threat to our scaley friends and we need to find a cure!

Cheri, please let me know what you'd like me to do. I can type up my journal on Mo if you think that would help. Do I send that to you or directly to the researcher?

Veronica

Beautiful Dragons

CheriS Sep 27, 2003 06:12 PM

will help... this is from his last email to me>

Thanks for the help. What I need to impress upon the Grant Committee panel is the importance of the disease. As you said, awareness of YFD is not very high among veterinarians, and members of the Foundations may (even probably) never have heard of it before. In the preproposal therefore, I will try to impress them with the magnitude of the problem by citing numbers. They first need to know that bearded dragons are extremely popular pets, hence the numbers I was asking you about. Such numbers would ideally be referencable, although I doubt I can find any references on bearded dragons commercial trade. I think that we underestimate the role of the CANV in YFD. In the half-dozen cases of bearded dragon fungal disease I investigated, ALL, without exceptions, were due to the CANV. The number of animals infected and the fact that this disease is so widespread among dragons, suggests a single causative agent, rather than a series of opportunistic fungi.

I have a few questions that could help me get the money: Do you know or do you have a source that could give us an estimate of the number of bearded dragons bred and/or sold every year in the US? Where would you rank yellow fungus disease among important diseases (coccidia, adenovirus) of beardeds? Do you know of breeders in which collection the disease is endemic? How easy do you think it would it be for me to get/purchase sick animals? I would need to assure them that I can get sick animals. My other option is to do a challenge, or both. Deadline for the preproposal is November 3rd, so I need to get going on this...

So, as much information or documentation that can be relayed to the committees that the NEED is there will help him get the grant funding.

Committees want to know need first, scientific ability to do the project next(he is well qualified and they have funded him before) supporting data that it is beneficial to a community and that they have the ability to have the animals available for testing follow through.

Send it to me through enmail, with your contact infomation if you want, people may remain anonymous also and we will assign a control number to those that wish that.

LdyPayne Sep 28, 2003 01:02 PM

Cheri, I am a member of the Bearded dragon egroup on Yahoo...so I am asking if I can copy your post above to the group to see if you can get any additional support there. I do not know if any on this egroup have encountered Yellow Fungus Disease, as nobody since I joined last year, has ever brought it up to my knowledge. I certainly think some response can be received there if I post your message.

CheriS Sep 28, 2003 07:40 PM

The more people we can get contributing data and articles or histories, the better chance he has of getting the funding.

THanks

Mattman Sep 28, 2003 12:42 AM

That's great news Cheri. Whatever I can help with I sure will try. Just contact me and let me know what I could offer this cause. I know how bad this is, and how many people are dealing with, and have lost many beloved beardies.
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Mystical Dragons

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