Milk flush for coccidiosis

So many people have issues and ask questions about coccidiosis that I thought I would post this milk flush treatment that I cam across. This is a treatment that a college agricultural dept. came up with. You can break it down into a smaller portion but this is as it was listed.

4 pounds of dried milk
2 pounds of corn meal
2 pounds of oatmeal
1 pound of bran

Feed this for 3-5 days with no other feed except some greens. The large amount of milk makes the chicks thirsty, causing them to drink. The milk sugar will turn to acid in the stomach and the extra added water will flush out the system.

Maybe this will help some of you that has a hard time finding the corid/amprol in your area.
 
hello @bonsoirval - welcome to BYC :frow
this is quite an old thread and it's not obvious why you quoted the first post; does your flock have an issue with coccidiosis?
Yes. I have lost close to ten birds to coccidiosis at first.
And then typhoid and cholera as my brother who poultry management said. They were having greenish pasty droppings.
Please help me. I love birds and see a career with them. Thanks
 
where are you? how old are your birds, and how many have you got? how many are affected, and have you separated them from the rest? what sort of conditions are you keeping them in? the more info you can provide, the better; photos are helpful.
What, if any, medications do you have to hand?

There are lots of people here who can and will help you, but you need to provide as much information as you can so we can target on our answers on your situation.

There are also lots of articles and threads that may have the answers you seek already; see the forum on
https://www.backyardchickens.com/forums/emergencies-diseases-injuries-and-cures.10/
and using the search feature can be useful
 
where are you? how old are your birds, and how many have you got? how many are affected, and have you separated them from the rest? what sort of conditions are you keeping them in? the more info you can provide, the better; photos are helpful.
What, if any, medications do you have to hand?

There are lots of people here who can and will help you, but you need to provide as much information as you can so we can target on our answers on your situation.

There are also lots of articles and threads that may have the answers you seek already; see the forum on
https://www.backyardchickens.com/forums/emergencies-diseases-injuries-and-cures.10/
and using the search feature can be useful
I am in Nigeria. My birds are 6 weeks old and they are 135 in number. I cannot really count the affected ones because I use litter system. I only removed / separated about 10 birds I saw pooping and that were infected. I spray sawdust on the floor and keep. And then clean the manure / waste when it is due for that like in 4 weeks interval.
I gave them cocci cure, amoxy col and kenflox at some point before i exhausted my budget for them and could not go on with poultry medication so i switched to using human medicine like - ampiclox for cocci, septrin cough, vitamin C or B complex to boost appetite.
 
I'll flag up a few people who may know how to help you with this, as these medications are beyond my ken; please be patient (given the appalling weather in the US at the moment they may not be able to respond soon or at all)
@dawg53 @Eggcessive @Wyorp Rock can you help here please?
 
I am in Nigeria. My birds are 6 weeks old and they are 135 in number. I cannot really count the affected ones because I use litter system. I only removed / separated about 10 birds I saw pooping and that were infected. I spray sawdust on the floor and keep. And then clean the manure / waste when it is due for that like in 4 weeks interval.
I gave them cocci cure, amoxy col and kenflox at some point before i exhausted my budget for them and could not go on with poultry medication so i switched to using human medicine like - ampiclox for cocci, septrin cough, vitamin C or B complex to boost appetite.
You can't give vitamins while treating for coccidiosis.

Cocci is not the same as coccidia (coccidiosis) and the meds needed to treat are very different.
 
I am in Nigeria. My birds are 6 weeks old and they are 135 in number. I cannot really count the affected ones because I use litter system. I only removed / separated about 10 birds I saw pooping and that were infected. I spray sawdust on the floor and keep. And then clean the manure / waste when it is due for that like in 4 weeks interval.
I gave them cocci cure, amoxy col and kenflox at some point before i exhausted my budget for them and could not go on with poultry medication so i switched to using human medicine like - ampiclox for cocci, septrin cough, vitamin C or B complex to boost appetite.
Yes. I have lost close to ten birds to coccidiosis at first.
And then typhoid and cholera as my brother who poultry management said. They were having greenish pasty droppings.
@Eggcessive may have some insight as well.

Thank you for giving more information so we know where you are located.

Cocci Cure is Amprolium which *should* treat Coccidiosis which is caused by Coccidia a protozoa.

You also mention Typhoid (Salmonella) and Cholera both which would be hard to treat and once treatment ends, symptoms/illness can return.
https://www.thepoultrysite.com/disease-guide/salmonella-gallinarum-fowl-typhoid

Sulfa Antibiotics may help treat the Coccidiosis if you are finding that the Amprolium is not effective (some names of sulfa drugs in the link below).
https://www.backyardchickens.com/th...se-warning-poop-picture.1159903/post-18226508

It would be good if you can work with poultry management programs in your area to see what they recommend.
Unfortunately if Typhoid and Cholera are both an issue, then depopulation may be needed to get it under control.
https://www.thepoultrysite.com/disease-guide/fowl-cholera-pasteurellosis
https://www.thepoultrysite.com/disease-guide/salmonella-gallinarum-fowl-typhoid

When using Amprolium, you would not want to give an extra vitamins that contain B1(Thiamine) during the course of treatment, but afterward giving a good multi-vitamin and probiotics for poultry would be a good idea. Buttermilk with white cooked rice can be soothing to the gut as well.
 
I would just buy cheap garlic, around $1.50 p/kg, which equates to a lot of garlic bulbs/corms. (People say bulbs these days but they used to be called corms). At a pinch I've used granulated dried raw garlic, and if you must substitute fresh raw garlic, I'd guess the stuff in a jar is also of some use. I don't know, I haven't used that, but generally any garlic is better than none because some of the active ingredients can't be cooked or processed out of it by standard means. However for active virus protection raw and fresh is best.

The main known antibiotic property, Allicin, is created by the reaction of the enzymes released after crushing or cutting the garlic, and dissipates in around 12 or less hours. Less in my experience but it would depend on the breed of garlic too. The more ancient and non-commercialized the breed, the more potent, but even the cheap stuff works for me. Garlic is also high in sulfur which makes a chicken's flesh and blood parasite deterring, once it's been on regular garlic for a while to infuse all its tissues. Works for internal and external parasites and other nasties like bad bacteria. The Allicin in garlic has been used to treat humans with food poisoning that does not react to even very strong pharmaceutical antibiotics and because the enzyme reaction is unique it prevents viral adaption and enables garlic to kill viruses and bacteria that man made antibiotics and antiviral drugs can't touch.

Since I mixed their grain with fluid to bind kelp powder into it I would just throw the garlic into that once minced. Kelp's another thing I would strongly recommend. It's contains all the vitamins and minerals in the correct balance and is a powerful endocrine regulator. It restores correct coloration to feathers/eyes/legs/beak/skin etc, and also instinct, but not in a spacky way; rather they become very intelligent but so peaceful in their interactions. I used to feed whatever I could afford that wasn't layer pellets or crumble or mash, since once you crack a grain the nutritional value depletes severely and progressively. Just cracked is fine. After 30 minutes, an hour, a day, there are shockingly large measurable increments of degradation, so the animals eat more to make up for it. Anyway I'd give coarse grain which has corn, red sorghum, black suflower seeds, and barley or wheat, also stuff like copra meal, millet, bran, whatever I thought they could do with. Raw milk from cows or goats is great, I never had any problems with it even though I would give them as much as they could consume. Apple cider vinegar is great too. My feed wasn't the best but was what I could afford after making allowances for what I considered very important staples (kelp and garlic) which retrospect has shown me were definitely the most important.

Sort of off-topic, last year I caught a virus that had been killing people in their prime rather than old folks and babies as is expected; it got a lot of news coverage. It was a mix of a virus and a bacteria and fungal infection working in cohesion. I had a fever for two days and was a skeleton when I emerged. I was left with a lung problem I knew would kill me if I didn't fix it... I don't look after myself the way I look after my animals, lol! I've had pleurisy before so I've got an idea what's a serious warning sign. Anyway it was making pockets of trapped air in my lungs and getting stronger even though the virus itself had run through, and nothing was coming out, so after a day or two I just chopped a single clove of raw garlic and swallowed it with water. The lung infection died within about 15 minutes, and I've been fine since. Other people died in hospital with the same thing, usually in comas they never emerged from. I am sure raw garlic could also have saved some or possibly all of them. If there's one thing you take a chance on, please try raw garlic for infections, especially viral ones; I'm not saying don't go to hospital, I'm just saying it's more powerful than many people know. A lot of doctors are waking up to its potential now.
I know this post is super old. But I have been treating my chickens who have coccidiosis with raw garlic along with other herbs (oregano, thyme, safe, turmeric) ACV, yogurt and lots of greens mixed in. I had a chicken go from huge amounts if bloody poop and looking completely listless and uninterested in anything to back up scratching, preening and chirping at me in about 2 days. I have been adding the garlic to all my flocks' water as well as feeding on the side with other herbs and greens and I've seen no one else looking sick and no more bloody poops.

In the human healing side of things. After I had my last baby, almost 3 years ago. I came down with what I think was mastitis. About 3 days post-partum I got a fever, aches, chills and felt sicker than I've ever felt. I started swallowing whole cloves of garlic and eating soup with raw garlic chopped up and thrown in after the soup was cooked. Also lots of other vitamins and veggies. I was better in about 2 days.. Garlic is powerful stuff!
 

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