Since palpebral refers to eyelids and snakes don't have any I am not familiar with the use of this term for snakes. You can't get drops into the eye through the potential space circling the orbit.
You could have in this case. I was quite surprised. I don't know what the correct terminology is here, I was merely trying to establish the description of what I was referring to.
I have found an excellent cross section of the snakes eye from Richard Shine in Australia. It is a pdf so maybe your browser/pc will "see" graphics downloaded this way:
www.bio.usyd.edu.au/Shinelab/shine/reprints/402originofsnakes.pdf
Thanks, that did indeed work. Unfortunately the structure I was talking about isn't labelled on the diagram, although it is depicted. The reflexive "flaps" shown at either side of the spectacle. These were rather more prominent than is implied in the diagram, and in fact gave the appearance of being vestigial eyelids without the actual lids. It's the space behind these flaps I was referring to. I didn't realise it was there at all, I had thought from the various descriptions that the spectacle was a simple continuation of the scaled skin without such flaps.
Treating a snake's eyes is a problem as they are effectively sealed/prevented from the instillation of medicines such as eye drops. The eyecap or spectacle is continuous with the top layer of skin which becomes "cuticle" and is shed in one piece (including the eye cap) periodically.
Picture of a Shed Snake Skin showing the eye cap intact:
http://www.geocities.com/happyherps/shedding.html
Well, of course trying to put eye drops in there would be of no practical use, because the spectacle prevents them from coming into contact with the cornea. I was merely describing what I saw as being
like the place where eye drops go, not suggesting that one might use it for that purpose in the snake.
Unfortunately the graphics problem prevented me from accessing that picture.
If you put down a python with flaccid paralysis you must suspect a highly infectious common disease of boas and pythons (boids) called inclusion body disease or IBD. Other symptoms are also present but paralysis is commonly seen in younger animals which I suppose in a retic could be less than 6 feet or so.
That was on the list of differentials, I believe. Histopathology of the CNS is in hand.
The really creepy thing was, after the snake had been thoroughly dissected and its organs laid out on the table, it was noticed that the heart was contracting, about once or twice a minute. The technician said, cool! I said, spooky.
By the way, the vet who sent the body in for PM said that the snake was pyrexic. Snakes are poikilotherms, right? How can they be pyrexic - other than lying too long in the sun that is?
Rolfe.