bacterial systemic · freshwater tank

Dropsy (Edema)

Dropsy (edema) is a fish disease where fluid accumulates in the body cavity, causing the abdomen to swell and scales to protrude (pinecone appearance). Usually a symptom of bacterial kidney infection or organ failure.

Reviewed by Fast Aquatics husbandry team · Updated May 2026
Severity: High - often fatal if pinecone effect is visible

Symptoms

What causes it

Bacterial infection (typically Aeromonas), poor water quality over time, parasites, or genetic predisposition.

Treatment options

Always treat in a separate quarantine tank.

Kanamycin + Maracyn 2. Combo treatment in hospital tank for 7-10 days. Most effective for early-stage dropsy.
Epsom salt. 1 tablespoon per 5 gallons in hospital tank. Helps reduce internal fluid retention.
Quarantine + clean water. Mild cases can recover with isolation and pristine water alone. Advanced dropsy is usually fatal.

Prevention

Maintain pristine water (zero ammonia/nitrite, low nitrate), feed varied diet, avoid stress.

Frequently asked questions

What does Dropsy (Edema) look like?

Swollen abdomen. Scales standing out from the body (pinecone effect). Bulging eyes.

What causes Dropsy (Edema)?

Bacterial infection (typically Aeromonas), poor water quality over time, parasites, or genetic predisposition.

How is Dropsy (Edema) treated?

Kanamycin + Maracyn 2: Combo treatment in hospital tank for 7-10 days. Most effective for early-stage dropsy.

Can Dropsy (Edema) be prevented?

Maintain pristine water (zero ammonia/nitrite, low nitrate), feed varied diet, avoid stress.

How fatal is Dropsy (Edema)?

High - often fatal if pinecone effect is visible

Related

Browse the full disease database for 45 aquarium conditions with treatment protocols, or check the care library for prevention-focused husbandry guides. Use our symptom matcher to rank likely diseases from observed signs, the water parameter checker to diagnose related water-quality issues, or the QT timeline calculator to plan a treatment schedule.

Aquarium-keeping fundamentals

Whatever specific topic brought you here, four fundamentals govern long-term aquarium success: water quality, parameter stability, biological filtration, and species-appropriate husbandry. Skip any one and the others struggle to compensate.

Water quality: ammonia + nitrite at zero, nitrate under 30 ppm freshwater + 10 ppm reef. Test weekly with API or Salifert kits. Use our water parameter checker to score your readings against your tank type.

Parameter stability: stable wrong parameters beat fluctuating ideal parameters. Most fish tolerate a wide pH range if it's stable. Sudden swings of 0.4+ pH or 5+°F kill fish faster than chronic suboptimal values. Use temperature controllers (Inkbird) + automated dosing for consistency.

Biological filtration: the bacterial colony on your filter media + rock + substrate is the engine. Never replace all media at once. Use our filter turnover calculator to size correctly.

Species-appropriate husbandry: research adult size, territoriality, diet, and tankmate compatibility before purchase. Use our tank stocking calculator + compatibility guides.

Frequently asked questions

How long does an aquarium take to set up? 4-6 weeks for full cycling + first stocking. Use our cycle ETA calculator + how long does cycling take.

What's the best aquarium for beginners? 20-gallon long. Big enough for parameter stability, small enough for budget + space. See beginner picks.

How often should I do water changes? 25-30% weekly. See water change frequency Q&A + water change calculator.

Why does my fish keep dying? 5 leading causes: uncycled tank, wrong species pairings, no quarantine, undersized tank, neglected water-change schedule. See full diagnosis.

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