Eggbound White Pekin question

WriterofWords

Has Fainting Chickens
14 Years
Dec 25, 2007
13,212
82
476
Chaparral, New Mexico
Hello, I've had some trouble with my White Pekin hen becoming egg-bound. A local breeder told me it is because she is obese. She is almost 6 months old and has been laying for 3 months. When she gets bound she stretches her back legs behind her and can't walk or get up. I have to wrap her in a warm blanket and dry until she can move again.
I'd like to know how I can prevent this from happening to her, it happens about every 3 weeks and when she does lay she lays a multiple yolk egg. In between onset she lays just fine.
Kate
 
Egg bound hens

A hen is said to be egg bound when she fails to lay her egg

This is a common condition, and may result from inflammation of the oviduct, malformed or double yolker egg, or a too large egg in a young pullet


She will sit like a penguin
She will bawk bawk bawk
The bird seems very restless
She will drink little and eat little
She will tend to stand all hunched up
She visits the nest regularly in an attempt to lay her egg
Hew oviduct may end up protrude due to excessive pushing by her to eject the egg; internal haemorrhage or exhaustion may occur and the fowl may die
She may smell badly
Her vent will look quite red and protrude
She may have faecal matter that has built up behind the egg, if you see white liquid that will be her urates trying to pass (urine in chickens)

Sit her in a tub of warm soapy water
Make sure the vent is submerged for about 30 minutes, this may seem like a long time, but you have to relax the vent area and make is subtle for the egg to pass through, it really does help the hen, 85% of the time this will be all that you will need to do for her and the egg will pass out with a little push from her

You can rub some lubricant around the vent area if you think that may help too, usually it doesn’t help the bird, but for some reason it helps the owners feel better that they are doing something , KY jelly, petroleum jelly, Vaseline or Olive Oil all work fine. But seeing as the egg is stuck further up this will probably help you feel better and do nothing for the hen

DO NOT STICK YOUR FINGER INTO THE VENT TO FEEL FOR THE EGG... not a good idea.. you can do damage to the hen and also break the egg, especially if it is a soft shell egg.. then you will have even more trouble .

Make sure you isolate her from the other hens, or they will peck at her vent causing more damage

Put her into an isolation cage, put plenty of news paper down first and then put heated towels down they will act like a heat pad for her, no drafts when she is wet or she will catch a chill

You can heat up towels in your microwave, works a treat
If you have a heat pad that would be even better, put plenty of towels over it or it will get messy
Leave her for a little while to see if she passes the egg, if not, repeat the warm water and soap again

Some people just use the heating pads, this sometimes seems to relax the muscles and allow the egg to slip out

Last resort
If this doesn’t work, you may have to resort to removing the egg manually, not a nice task, and she will complain about what you are doing bitterly, you will need two people to do this task

Using KY jelly, Petroleum jelly or Vaseline, insert your finger in the vent
With your other hand you can press gently on her abdomen moving the egg down the oviduct towards the cloaca

Once you can see the egg, if it won’t pass, then rupture the egg and gently remove all the shell

Some have suggested you use a sharp instrument, I would not recommend this at all it could result in causing the hen internal injuries

The shell of the egg will be very sharp when broken and could also damage the chicken internally

Once you have broken the shell, make sure you remove every particle carefully

The cloaca should then be washed with a weak warm water/salt solution, this is to make sure all the egg contents and shell has been removed from inside the hen, if it isn’t it could cause bacteria to start growing inside her, and then you’ve got an even bigger problem to solve

Once the egg has ejected you will want to keep an eye on her for a while

There may be another egg backed up in her oviduct system, especially if she lays an egg every day or every other day

Sometimes they absorb the egg, but this is very unlikely and very unusual

If you can’t find the egg and it has gone from the hen, more than likely she has eaten it shell and all

If it has ruptured inside her, you should look for small pieces of shell, or evidence of any cuts around the vent area

Just remember while your looking and sticking your finger in places she would prefer you didn’t, the egg shells can be quite sharp and may cut you and her

If you do find any cuts around her cloaca, rinse with a weak solution of hydrogen peroxide and water

Watch her for listlessness, dull eyes, and signs of fever
Infection can come on pretty quick

Keep a close eye on her, this could happen again to her and she will need immediate action to fix the problem
 
If you can, put her on a diet. No corn and just duck rations. Being too fat is one of the main reason pet chickens end up egg bound. She is also a meat breed of duck if I remember right, so that's one thing against her.
 
Thank you both, I appreciate the time you took to answer me and Whitey does to! Usually when she is having this problem I put her in the rabbit pen (1 white rabbit in there) for a couple of days afterwards and I see her lay. The last time this happened she laid a 4 yolk egg, it looked like a small toilet paper tube. She will lay just fine for a few days after but then has issues again.
This may be a silly question but is there anyway to "fix" her? I mean by making her "egg free" in some way? I'm hoping as she matures this might stop, otherwise I'm very worried about her longevity and health.
Kate
 
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I just wanted to leave a note about hydrogen Peroxide. It should not be used on animals. It will actually kill health flesh, better to use something like Dettol or other anitbacterial.
 
Peroxide shouldn't be used on humans either or on any damaged flesh. Thank you very much for adding that, a lot of people think it is a cure all and considering how widely used it has been for decades it's a hard habit to break.
K
 
Hydrogen peroxide used neat will kill the flesh... but used as a weak watered down solution is ok

Its a good cleaning agent... but NEVER use it neat on any flesh.. as the others say it will kill newly developing flesh

You can use a weak solution of Betadine (iodine) if you prefer, but please not Dettol... its too strong and tends to burn

WriterofWords = You may need to push the bird into a forced molt

Force Molting

My personal recommendation to push a bird into a forced molt is:
1. Decrease lighting to less than 6 hours a day, no artificial light in the coop
2. Stop feeding layer pellets, and table scraps and any other feed your giving apart from ‘Wheat’
3. Supply only half the amount of feed your normally feed the birds and it must only be in wheat and only wheat
4. They must have as much clean fresh water as they require
5. Once they start to molt, put them back onto their normal diet and increase the protein level in the diet to build them up and help them to re feather more quickly and better quality feathers
6. If you can get ‘Food Grade Kelp”, this is excellent for birds in molt, it helps feather quality and if you intend to hatch chicks you will also get healthier chicks. Mix the Kelp at 2% of dry feed ratio
7. Once they start to molt they can then resume getting the normal light during the day but don’t add any extra lighting in the coop
8. By adding the extra protein to their diet they will re feather and start laying much quicker than normal, and the egg quality will be heavier – not larger

The forced molt ideas works, other ideas are to starve the bird, I find this barbaric so do not recommend it.

They may take a little bit longer but I never have any deaths due to starvation
 

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