At first I thought I had Ich (well, not me but my little Sesshomaru) and asked a member a question to make sure I understood the treatment methods ... but now I think it is something else ...
I was wondering if someone could help diagnose this white stuff so I treat the problem correctly. A LFS said to use PimaFix and Melafix once my BB gets back up to normal. I plan to put in the Bio-Spira I purchased after I am sure that Ich-Attack organic stuff is gone, and I take the carbon filters out (how long should it take to clear it so I can remove the carbon?) and give my filter media a good tank water rinsing to remove any remaining in it. This stuff leaves a brown film on everything and smells like hickory smoke, A1, and Pastrami ... didn't bother the little guy at all, nor his appetite. If anyone has had it work please feel free to give it a thumbs up, but for me I will never try it again. I even started to increase the dose as it says you can do about halfway through, and naively believed it to be working.
The symptoms ... At first, I noticed a little flat white spot towards the front of his body. Then I saw a small cluster of flat white spots on the body near the tail. Well, it was on him for about 5 days, then was clear for about 5 days, and I was using up the last of the Ich-Attack, then I noticed two white 'fluffy' (kinda like little cotton tufts) spots, on opposite sides but same place, in the crease that follows the vertical part of the gill line just in front of the gills, small, maybe 1 mm spots. I tried to get a picture but the only one that was clear enough to see my little guy had bubbles in it and made him look like he had ich all over him but you couldn't see the things I am talking about
My tank right now has a ton of tiny air bubbles floating around, which doesn't bother him or I, but doesn't help much with the pictures ... and I am sure they are air bubbles, if I turn the air stones down for a day or two it diminishes, but don't want to lower the oxygen levels since I am messing with the tank and raising the temps.My little guy is energetic, always hungry, responsive, breathing normal ... unless you get right up to him and look for it, you would never know there was any problem. I was just about to consider the problem dealt with when I saw the new spots. I wanted to lower my water temp to lessen its heat load on the room, but now I don't know how long this will take.
I was treating for Ich with the organic Ich-Attack (Chemicals for me are an absolute last resort). It knocked out part of my BB a bit suddenly yesterday, so be careful using it. I had a big nitrite creep over the last 24 hours and a minimal reading for ammonia and before that my levels were always 0 on each. I did a 50% change to remove a big portion of that stuff and drop the nitrites some, tomorrow another big change. Before the water change amm almost 0 ppm, nitrite close to 2 ppm, nitrate approx. 10 ppm (the tap water started having some
), pH between 7.4-7.8, 83 F and rising, 1.5 TBSP/5 gal aquarium salt (API), 55 gal, Emperor 400, 250W Visi-Therm Stealth, air wand and air volcano ... I will test it tomorrow before I change the water again. I will be slowly lowering the salt once this is all done, but had read elsewhere it helped with Ich treatment by dehydrating the parasite. I had used it when I introduced him and started the tank, was slowly removing it before I noticed the first spots, now after seeing nitrites, and reading it is proven to lessen nitrite absorbtion, I will leave it for now.btw, my LFS advised me to never change that much water at once (50%), they even looked at me funny when I said I changed 20% two days ago and clean my gravel every time I take water out. They said that disturbs the bacteria and that is why I am having problems ... I bit my tongue ... their freshwater tanks always have yellow water ... and there was quite a few berry tetras (
) that had Ich, so now I know what it looks like and quite sure it isn't what mine has, a dying juvie O that hasn't grown in months (4" max TL) and all its tank mates died (I saw them DOA), etc. BUT, they are the only place that carries Bio-Spira and they do keep it refrigerated. The saltwater stuff is taken much better care of. PetSmart is the best place we have (never have dyed fish) and has the largest selection of food and other products (yes, more selection than the fish store). What I would give for a local quality fish shop ... sorry for that rant, it just irks me to see such icky tanks, wal-mart has cleaner tank water/tanks ... 
I cannot think clearly and want to take the proper next step and quit jumping to conclusions and treating for things he doesn't have. I really shouldn't worry so much since he is visibly happy and active, but I know that I am responsible for him and love him a lot, and don't want to wait too long, or wrongly assume he is ok, and kick myself if something happens to him. I feel like one of those over-protective parents that takes their kids to the doctor for a cold because I think they have pneumonia (did I spell that correctly?), but don't want to be the parent that assumes the kid is ok and the child ends up having TB.
Any help will be greatly appreciated. Hope I made sense and gave enough of the right info.
edit: those little white spots are actually at the top of that jaw line, right where it ends. They are very small, but not ich-like crystal dots. If he wasn't so dark, I would almost describe it as little pieces of skin, like a slight shedding. I teased him with some krill to get a better look at it (then fed it to him). Krill is his favorite treat. Just trying to describe it the best I can ... since pictures weren't working, I am tired and will try to get a good, clean picture tomorrow.



and now his tank doesn't heat up my room like a stone pizza oven. The salt has been phased out of the water. My ammonia and nitrites have been under control (0 ppm) and my nitrates are staying between 5-10 ppm. He is less finicky eating ... he didn't even hold out a day when I wouldn't give him krill, so now he gets a combination of Bio-Gold mini, Bio-Gold+ medium, and Oscar Grow for breakfast and dinner, and a piece of krill as a treat before bed.