There is compilation on common parasites, treatments, preventatives, etc. at: http://www.smartgroups.com/vault/ferrethealth/common_parasites.txt Grinding can indicate nausea; has an ulcer been considered? Past posts on those in the FML and FHL Archives might be helpful: http://listserv.cuny.edu/archives/ferret-search.html http://fhl.sonic-weasel.org/ Has Carafate been tried? It now comes in a liquid prep that is available at any pharmacy by prescription. The MIT study involved ferrets who came down with lympho YEARS after the viral exposure. The changed begun by a virus can take a long time to cause a malignancy. DO remember that most lympho cases are not of the clumping kind, though such clumps do happen and are heartbreaking when they do. There is no reason to think that he poses a risk for your other ferrets; any viral trigger should be long gone. (I checked on this again recently with the veterinary experts before we added ferrets because we lost 5 to a lympho clump. I was told that there would be no risk to the new ones.) >Switch: "Lily! Chill out! The Crandall can't hurt you, it's only a >story!" You haven't encountered me after a good helping of refries! Not able to hurt you? Step back; I can give new meaning to "weapons of mass destruction". (Of course, ferrets LIKE that...) Even now I am going out to fill a backpack with cans of baked beans and hop a choo-choo to MA! Not afraid of me? HA! Legum'lgetcha! [Posted in FML issue 4128]