GBWhite
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I don't follow,I wrote earlier that I had it happen to a 7yo mac and it occurred directly after it's first feed after winter cooling.If it was a congenital defect then why would it take 7 years to show?
G'day Ramsayi,
I'll post an extract from the first link that I included in my original post that may shed some light on what possibly went on with your mac.
I've read other articles where it implies that the expansion of the heart is a common occurrence in other species of pythons when fed following a period of fasting. My understanding is that there hasn't been any detailed study to confirm the theory as yet but it's assumed that it occurs mainly to help with the digestion of claws and teeth of the food item.
I believe what bigg_bunny is referring to is actually a cardiac problem dissociated with the inflation of the heart caused by eating after a fast. I'm sure he'll correct me if I'm wrong...lol.
Personally I wonder if the cardiac problem mentioned by bigg_bunny has anything to do with the common practice of artificial incubation of python eggs. I've seen many clutches of neonates (Morelia, Antaresia, Aspidites) that have come out of the eggs with obvious large lumps about a third the way down their body (in the area where the snakes heart is located) and commented to the keepers that the "deformity" appeared to be conducive with artificial incubation.
Cheers,
George.
"The Burmese python, an imposing Asian native that can stretch to more than 5 meters in length, is the incredible, inflatable snake. This squeezing predator frequently goes months without eating and then gorges, sometimes downing an entire deer. To accommodate the sudden rush of sugars, fats, and proteins, its body goes into overdrive. Its metabolism speeds up nearly 40 times, and many of its organs, including its long digestive tract, double in size. Its heart also expands by 40%, presumably to pump greater volumes of blood throughout its body".
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