Health & Veterinary Care

Symptom checker, common treatments, and finding qualified reptile veterinarians for your Sulcata.

Important

ALWAYS check with your vet or a well-known expert before following any advice, especially from unconfirmed sources. Every case is different.

💊 Medical Measures & Treatments

Deworming

  • Don't deworm on a fixed schedule like some mammals — base it on evidence.
  • Routine fecal testing every 6–12 months is ideal for captive tortoises.
  • During fecal examination, the vet checks for parasite eggs or larvae. Deliver samples quickly as parasites die fast.

When to test:

  • Visible signs: Poor appetite, weight loss, lethargy, diarrhea, bloated appearance, mucus from mouth, worms in feces.
  • New arrivals: Any tortoise should be tested before housing with others, especially rescues.

Constipation Relief

In cases of constipation, warm water baths combined with laxative foods can help:

  • Dandelion
  • Prickly pear cactus
  • Pumpkin
  • Aloe vera

Restoring Gut Flora

  • Probiotics such as NutriBAC df (formulated for reptiles) can restore healthy gut flora.
  • Boosts appetite, enhances digestion, and reduces stress.
  • Sprinkle powder directly onto food.
  • Give every 3–4 days initially, then reduce to 1–2 times per month for maintenance.
Tube Feeding

Esophagostomy tube feeding is a very serious and risky procedure. It should only be performed on critically ill animals by a veterinarian.

🏥 Finding a Veterinarian

Tip

If it is not an emergency, consider visiting your vet first without bringing your tortoise.

  • Maintain a healthy level of skepticism — not all vets have tortoise-specific expertise.
  • Standard veterinary practices can sometimes be unnecessary or harmful for tortoises.
  • Always consider what is truly best for your tortoise. If in doubt, seek a second opinion.
  • Whenever possible, seek out a veterinarian with specific experience in reptiles.

Recommended Veterinarians

🇺🇸 USA

🇯🇵 Japan

Note

Know a great reptile vet? Submit a suggestion!