Thiamine (Vitamin B1) Deficiency: causes, symptoms and treatment
Thiamine (Vitamin B1) Deficiency — causes, symptoms, diagnosis, intervention and prevention in aquarium fish; mortality without intervention: high.
Overview
Feeding raw thiaminase-containing fish (smelt, herring, goldfish, etc.) breaks down thiamine, causing neurological signs in predatory fish like lionfish, eels, large cichlids. Dietary/metabolic cause: Diet of thiaminase-rich raw fish (smelt, herring, goldfish feeders). Reported mortality without intervention: high.
Symptoms
- loss of equilibrium
- spinning swimming
- convulsions
- anorexia
- loss of color
- death without intervention
Causes
This is a dietary or metabolic disorder rather than an infection, although secondary pathogens may complicate it. The cause is Diet of thiaminase-rich raw fish (smelt, herring, goldfish feeders). Risk factors include feeding the wrong food type for the species, overfeeding, monotonous diets lacking vitamins or fibre, and feeding raw or thiaminase-rich items. It is not transmissible, but tankmates fed the same diet share the same risk.
Diagnosis
Diagnosis is made from the feeding history together with clinical signs, after ruling out water-quality problems by testing. A monotonous or species-inappropriate diet, overfeeding, or raw thiaminase-rich foods point to a nutritional origin. Where a protozoal complication such as Hexamita or Spironucleus is suspected, a fresh faecal smear or skin scrape under the microscope helps separate the primary dietary problem from a secondary infection.
Treatment
Treatment corrects the diet and supports the affected organ system; recovery is gradual. Fasting, fibre, an Epsom-salt (magnesium sulfate) bath, and a balanced vitamin-rich diet address most cases, with a targeted active substance added only where a secondary infection is confirmed.
Step 1: Isolation
A separate hospital tank is useful when an Epsom-salt bath or medicated food is needed, but the diet correction applies to the whole tank. If you do isolate the fish, match temperature and pH to the display tank, keep the bottom bare for easy siphoning, and acclimate slowly to avoid adding stress to an already weakened animal.
Step 2: Intervention
- Thiamine supplementation. Inject thiamine 25 mg/kg fish or feed thiamine-soaked food, eliminate thiaminase-containing prey, switch to silversides/squid/shrimp. (duration: weeks)
Step 3: Recovery
Recovery is gradual and measured in weeks to months. Keep the corrected, varied, vitamin-rich diet in place permanently, maintain regular water changes, and watch body condition and appetite as the markers of progress. Reintroduce the fish to the display only once feeding and buoyancy or condition are reliably normal.
Prevention
- never feed only raw smelt/herring/goldfish
- vary diet with silverside, krill, squid
- supplement with thiamine periodically
- soak feeder foods in a vitamin supplement