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Mareks: Long-term prognosis - Page 7

post #61 of 142

Im not sure Baby had Mareks but he was pretty sick and made a complete recovery with intensive vitamin B treatment.  I saw improvement in him once I started the treatment, within a week.  He was paralyzed for a month before I learned of vitamin b as a treatment.

Before treatment:

Baby sleeping in new ortho bed.jpg

Baby after full recovery:

Baby today.jpg

Id try vitamin b with any chicken showing any sort of signs of paralysis or nerve issue.  I dont think a great majority of flocks get enough from their main diet.

-Robin-
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-Robin-
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post #62 of 142
Thread Starter 

My affected birds should not have a vitamin D defeciency since most are free range.  Nonetheless I am popping them with a vitamin rich diet in case you are correct..

Make every effort to understand your chicken's biology and the environment that supports it.
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Make every effort to understand your chicken's biology and the environment that supports it.
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post #63 of 142

Ummm...he said B, not D.

post #64 of 142
Thread Starter 
Quote:
Originally Posted by ontimeborzoi View Post

Ummm...he said B, not D.



You are correct.  My foods also rich in all forms of vitamin B.  Vitamin D they can make from scratch with sunlight exposure if they have same abilities we have.

 

Make every effort to understand your chicken's biology and the environment that supports it.
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Make every effort to understand your chicken's biology and the environment that supports it.
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post #65 of 142

Mine free range too and I would have never suspected vit b as a deficiency in any of them. I have heard some animals as humans have a harder time absorbing the b.  Doesnt the b make the yolks of eggs rich in yellow color?  I have some egg layers producing very yellow egg yolks while others, not so yellow.  They all have access to the same foods and veggie offerings of the yard.  Is it possible the ones with less color and the babies who develop nerve issues are the ones who dont absorb the vit b as well from their foods?  Just a though and Im just sharing my experience with paralysis and vit b.  Note, vit b has not drastically improved all of my ailing birds, just this one in the pictures.  I had others who didnt respond to the treatment.  Id try it rather than not if it was me.

-Robin-
Let your life speak for you...it is said, "How you live your life speaks so loudly that others can't hear what you are saying anyway."
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-Robin-
Let your life speak for you...it is said, "How you live your life speaks so loudly that others can't hear what you are saying anyway."
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post #66 of 142

Here's the things I found so far that can cause paralysis/inability to walk:

 

Marek's

Botulism

Poisoning from any fungus or mold

Vitamin deficiency (B's usually caused by medicated feed)

weakness due to illness

 

Most times the chicken looks sick.  Except in Marek's, they still act pretty normal/happy.

Did I miss any?

 

and injury,

mechanical damage in juveniles

blow to head


Edited by seminolewind - 2/10/12 at 2:15pm
post #67 of 142
Thread Starter 
Quote:
Originally Posted by seminolewind View Post

Here's the things I found so far that can cause paralysis/inability to walk:

 

Marek's

Botulism

Poisoning from any fungus or mold

Vitamin deficiency (B's usually caused by medicated feed)

weakness due to illness

 

Most times the chicken looks sick.  Except in Marek's, they still act pretty normal/happy.

Did I miss any?


Mechanical damage sometimes occurs in juveniles that appears related to nerves.  I have only seen in production birds, never games, so may be tied to more rapid growth and resulting increased vulnerability to physical blows.

 

 

Bird in image has damage to head / neck which did go away after a couple days.

 

 900x600px-LL-d109e84b_41527_sick_dominique_x_california_grey_pullet.jpeg
 

 

Make every effort to understand your chicken's biology and the environment that supports it.
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Make every effort to understand your chicken's biology and the environment that supports it.
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post #68 of 142

Does anyone know if they will recover from food poisoning?  I have a little fella I suspect ate some moldy honeydew melon.  He can move his legs but is unable to stand.  He just seems very weak.  If recovery is possible, does anyone know what the expected time frame is for it?  He has been sick for two weeks as of today.

-Robin-
Let your life speak for you...it is said, "How you live your life speaks so loudly that others can't hear what you are saying anyway."
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-Robin-
Let your life speak for you...it is said, "How you live your life speaks so loudly that others can't hear what you are saying anyway."
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post #69 of 142
Thread Starter 
Quote:
Originally Posted by Lobzi View Post

Does anyone know if they will recover from food poisoning?  I have a little fella I suspect ate some moldy honeydew melon.  He can move his legs but is unable to stand.  He just seems very weak.  If recovery is possible, does anyone know what the expected time frame is for it?  He has been sick for two weeks as of today.



Best to post in thread entitled such.  I do not have experience with moldy feed being fed to chickens.

 

Make every effort to understand your chicken's biology and the environment that supports it.
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Make every effort to understand your chicken's biology and the environment that supports it.
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post #70 of 142

Some recover from poisoning.  I don't know about the paralysis, I haven't read enough.

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