In many countries any veterinarian medicine intended for mammals are regulated to the same extent as human medicine given the obvious crossover use, in these countries medication intended for goldfish is generally NOT regulated and freely available, which makes gold-fish antibiotics a viable option in these places but I just started thinking.
Goldfish are quite susceptible to parasites and Ivermectin is an anti-parasitic, the thing is stuff like this isn't exactly clearly marked on the packaging short of 'tearaway to read more' type labels and unlike in the US this stuff is sold in small stores rather than huge supermarkets so starting to tear at labels is less of an option that it would be at target/walmart and what not.
So, does anyone know if goldfish ivermectin is a thing and if so what brand and product names is it available as/under???
Keep on the Quercetin then. I take it as well. Bromelain with it is even better.
Quercetin is just either concentrated raspberry or onion extract, anyways. Bromelain comes from pineapple hearts.
Ivermectin is pretty much the same, except instead of raspberries or onions it comes from Japanese soil bacteria cultures.
That's why Ivermectin is cheap as dirt. It is literally concentrated dirt enzymes.
Their primary mode of action are as zinc ionophores. All the above are useless without the zinc. They open the cells up to accept zinc which, non-chemically, dismantles the proteins.
Zinc also blocks ACE2 receptors using its natural polarity.
Honestly, it would appear anything labeled for use as an anti-malarial do the same.
Pick your poison. At the very least, if not any of the above, just take some chelated zinc. All of them need it to work anyway.