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my bearded dragon is sick

22 13:27:49

Question
Hello
I have a 5 month old beearded dragon. She as of yesterday started to act very strange and im scared. She does not move very much at all or eat. She has a tilt in her heard to the left and when does move it is almost like she is drunk and can not move straight and just goes in cirlces to the left. I have a 10 fallen cage with 1 60 watt basking bulb and a low wattage day light bulb. There id a piece of drift wood in her tank and a rock. The brand of lights are a flucker basking light and a exo terra day light. She has been eating meal worms and calciam coated crickets before this was happening her cage temp has been around 80 to 90 and I keep the basking bulb On 24/7. Any advice to further help my dragon would be greatly appreciated. Thanks gage

Answer
Well, I see a lot of problems right off the bat.  Your dragon is most likely suffering from hypocalcemia and/or an inner ear infection.

Your setup lacks a basking spot of 95 to 105, which is what is recommended for bearded dragons, and that needs to be corrected, but it's not the main source of the issue.  I imagine your dragon is also very stressed from not having a normal day and night cycle, which cannot be helping.  Do not leave the lights on 24/7 (can you imagine trying to sleep in that?)

You do not appear to have a UVB reptile light at all.  Bearded dragons have extremely high UVB requirements, as they are a sun-loving desert species.  They simply can't process vitamin D supplements well enough.  Without UVB light (which enables them to create vitamin D in their skin, just as we do), they become vitamin D deficient.  Without vitamin D, they cannot properly metabolize calcium--bones weaken and become brittle, and many other vital processes in their body are compromised.
UVB producing reptile lights are either fluorescent lights that must be replaced every 6 months, or mercury-vapor reptile lights that provide both UVB light and heat.  Incandescents can produce UVA, but not UVB.

A 5 month old bearded dragon should be getting pretty large.  A 10 gallon tank is completely inadequate in size.  Adults require a 50 gallon tank, and your dragon should be half grown, so it should be in at least a 20 gallon or 30 gallon, by now.

At 5 months of age, your dragon should be eating daily salads of mixed greens such as collards, dandelion, turnip tops, and mustard greens, with a little grated carrot or squash and green peas, and occasional fruit, every single day.
It should be fed as many gut-loaded and calcium-dusted crickets as it can eat in 15 minutes, offered at least twice a day.

Since your dragon has stopped eating, and is severely debilitated, you need to immediately take it to a veterinarian with lots of reptile experience, and explain the situation.  The vet can diagnose the problem and properly treat it, so the dragon can begin to feel better and start eating again.  The vet may also administer nutritional support if it's needed.  You also need to correct your husbandry immediately, of course.

I recommend buying a book on bearded dragon care, and looking up a variety of online care sheets.  Never take advice from pet store personnel.