My Betta's Left Eye Is Popping Out!

davidnso

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Hi,

I woke up and was doing my betta feeding routine, and I noticed that my male's betta left eye was unusually large. I looked closer and it looks like its popping out! Not totally, but its very swollen opposed to his other eye, it looks like :blink: << that face. All I have in the tank is a fake plant and I don't know how this could've happened overnight. Any ideas? Can I help him out somehow or is it basically self-healing?

Thanks!
 
Your betta appears to have pop-eye. Now to save you the trouble this is quoted from bettatalk.com:

GENERAL INFO:

If you always keep your betta’s water very clean, he is not very likely to get Popeye. Popeye is a bacterial infection usually caused by poor water condition (in other words filthy water because you were too darn lazy to get off the couch and attend to your betta!!!). but popeye can also be the tip of the iceberg, the external sign that something inside Mr. Betta is going very wrong. For example, tuberculosis will sometimes result in popeye. In that case, the popeye may not be curable or even if it gets better the fish will die (because tuberculosis is not curable and always kills its host). In short the fish will have died, not of the popeye itself, but because of the more serious disease that triggered it.

SYMPTOMS:
One or both of Mr. Betta’s eyes start bulging out. In about 2 to 7 days the eye might look so grotesque you will be afraid to look at your betta. Casimodo on a bad day will look more attractive then your betta at that point!! Please do not destroy your betta! In many cases, the bettas make a full recovery from it and look normal again, as if nothing had happened. Only some of the popeye cases are caused by the terminal diseases mentioned above and will result in your betta dying. The rest will heal nicely if caught early and treated aggressively (see below). During outbreak, betta may be less active, may stop eating.

TREATMENT:
As I said, popeye is usually not fatal and Mr. Betta will often fully recover. On occasion he may lose an eye. But if you catch it right away, he should be fine. Immediately do a full water change. Keep his water very clean, changing it every third day. After putting him in clean water, add the antibiotic Ampicillin to his water. It has become difficult to find on the market and can be costly, but if you can find a 12 capsule quantity, it will be well worth the $10 to $12 investment. This medication usually comes in capsules. A full capsule usually treats 10 gal of water. So for a 1/2 gallon of water, open the capsule and take the right proportion of powder and sprinkle on jar water. You may steer gently with a disposable plastic spoon. This is a white powder and will not affect the color of the water. Do not overmedicate! Once Betta’s eyes are back to normal, keep treating for one more week (just to be sure) and then stop the medication. And keep his water clean from now on darn it!!

Good luck.
 
Your betta appears to have pop-eye. Now to save you the trouble this is quoted from bettatalk.com:

GENERAL INFO:

If you always keep your betta’s water very clean, he is not very likely to get Popeye. Popeye is a bacterial infection usually caused by poor water condition (in other words filthy water because you were too darn lazy to get off the couch and attend to your betta!!!). but popeye can also be the tip of the iceberg, the external sign that something inside Mr. Betta is going very wrong. For example, tuberculosis will sometimes result in popeye. In that case, the popeye may not be curable or even if it gets better the fish will die (because tuberculosis is not curable and always kills its host). In short the fish will have died, not of the popeye itself, but because of the more serious disease that triggered it.

SYMPTOMS:
One or both of Mr. Betta’s eyes start bulging out. In about 2 to 7 days the eye might look so grotesque you will be afraid to look at your betta. Casimodo on a bad day will look more attractive then your betta at that point!! Please do not destroy your betta! In many cases, the bettas make a full recovery from it and look normal again, as if nothing had happened. Only some of the popeye cases are caused by the terminal diseases mentioned above and will result in your betta dying. The rest will heal nicely if caught early and treated aggressively (see below). During outbreak, betta may be less active, may stop eating.

TREATMENT:
As I said, popeye is usually not fatal and Mr. Betta will often fully recover. On occasion he may lose an eye. But if you catch it right away, he should be fine. Immediately do a full water change. Keep his water very clean, changing it every third day. After putting him in clean water, add the antibiotic Ampicillin to his water. It has become difficult to find on the market and can be costly, but if you can find a 12 capsule quantity, it will be well worth the $10 to $12 investment. This medication usually comes in capsules. A full capsule usually treats 10 gal of water. So for a 1/2 gallon of water, open the capsule and take the right proportion of powder and sprinkle on jar water. You may steer gently with a disposable plastic spoon. This is a white powder and will not affect the color of the water. Do not overmedicate! Once Betta’s eyes are back to normal, keep treating for one more week (just to be sure) and then stop the medication. And keep his water clean from now on darn it!!

Good luck.
weird, i just changed the water a few days ago...i hope its not tuberculosis!

anyway, thanks for the info buddy! =)
 
I had pop eye with one of my girls, I made sure the water was really clean, added a little aquarium salt and some indian almond leaf extract and it went down in less than a week.
 
The good news is that popeye doesn't cause death, death is caused by secondary infections the follow the erruption of the eye. As long as the pop eye is treated and the swelling is not allowed to grow so bad that the eye actually explodes, you don't have much to worry about. Oh and pop eye isn't always caused by poor water quality it can also be caused by tiny nitrogen bubbles in the water getting caught behind the eye.
 
Pretty much any anti bacterial treatment stronger than melafix should be ok. If you're in the UK try myxazin from waterlife. If you're in the US the listed med is probably as good as any.

In general tho it is indeed secondary infection that can lead to complications. With clean water and a med his eye should be pretty much normal in a couple of days. All it takes is a knock or injury to the eye to set it off, or an infection. It's very treatable tho. I treated one of the platys in my community tank a month or so ago and her eye was back to normal in about 48 hours.
 
As previously stated it may not be caused by "bad water conditions" but maybe the he caught his eye on the fake plant, if it is a plastic one remove it, there are many live plants that you can put into the tank without too much maintenance, I would recommend you remove the fake plant whilst you are treating your betta just in case he caught his eye on a plastic stem.

Good luck I hope he gets better :good:
 
Was just wondering how the little guys doing today? :)
hmm, his eye is still popping out, last night it was swelling more than it did.

he seems very sick, as he is usually sitting at the bottom of the tank being idle now, whereas he is usually an active little fella.

im at work right now so im not able to check on his condition at the moment, but i have a problem. i live on campus in the dorms and have no means of transportation to purchase meds for water treatment. is my best bet just keeping the water clean and feeding him as usual now?

will his eye actually explode :sick: if i dont treat him with meds or can it be self-healed?

thanks for all your help guys i really appreciate it!
 
update: 3rd day and his eye is popping out pretty much the same. but, his behaviour is coming back to normal
 
Keep the water crystal clean, if you have access to Uniodized salt a pinch or 2 of that may help a bit. The eyes don't actually "explode" they just get so swollen that the eye is pushed completely out of the socket and they become one eyed fish. The eye falling out is a gateway for all kinds of gross infections that could be pretty life threatening, so just keep his water as clean as possible!!!! :good:
 
i may have access to a car this weekend so ill start stocking up on these! hopefully it wont be too late :unsure:
 

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