Impacted crop, impacted gizard, sour crop.....differences in each?

chickenbike

Songster
11 Years
Apr 1, 2008
410
16
144
British Columbia, Canada
What are the differing symptoms of each?

What is the timeline progression?

Are these the only three stages?

What are possible cures for each?


I was just reading of these three different stages (I never realized there WERE three stages!). Now I am curious about the answer to the above questions
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He prescribed 1 ml twice daily

As to the crop, that it is changing is a good sign! They can eat hay and shavings, it's just when they eat too long of a piece or bunches all at once that it can get impacted. I was going around feeling crops today and some, if I were guessing, I'd say were impacted, but they were not large and of course the chickens have all been fine, so it was normal. I just haven't gone around squeezing crops. If you have other chickens, you might want to feel their crops so you can get an idea of normal, like I did. They will be different because they eat and drink at different times, but you'll get a range of what is right. My hen's crop is just huge though.... she looks like she has a massive tumor.
 
crop and gizzard impaction will produce hardened crop, bird will refuse food and look slugish... for crop impaction you can put a bit of oil into the bird, massage the crop and hope whatever blocked the crop will break away and pass through, withhold food during treatment until crop is cleared. Oil and a lot of luck is the only treatment for gizzard impaction.

Sour crop can be the side effect of the first 2 problem, food in the crop starting to ferment and turn sour.... this comes with a ripe smell coming out of the chicken. Withhold pellet/ hard food, feed yoghurt and water, for myself I "rinse" the chicken by pumping water into the crop, hold the bird upside down and squeeze the water out (repeat 3-4 times).
 
What is the average time frame for treatment for crop impaction? As you mention withholding food during treatment.......how long can a chicken go without food?

You mention feeding yoghurt and water only for treating sour crop. How many days would you do this before offering mash again?
 
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Treatment duration depends on how bad the blockage is. If caught early, you can get things moving within an hour. If left to ferment, it may take a few days. If the bird is healthy and well fleshed, he can go safely for about one week without food. After that things start to go downhill. Always offer water though.

This may help...
http://sites.google.com/site/moodysbantams/poultry-health-1/crop-impaction
 
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Until the crop is empty, no point in feeding them.

the yoghurt and water, first couple of days then mix with their regular feed.
 
Thank you for detailing the signs and symptoms of an impacted crop! I was trying to figure out why my hen has lost a lot of weight. Since her crop doesn't feel hard or smell sour, then I assume impaction isn't the cause. However, I was wondering how long it should take for a full crop to become empty? I am force feeding her parrot mash (with Nutri-drench) and she sometimes eats a bit of crumbled egg yolk on her own. Her crop is definately getting emptier in between feedings, but I was wondering if it is getting completely emptied...

What should an empty crop feel like? (What size is the organ itself?) I have given her some olive oil and massaged the crop, just to make sure everything is moving smoothly. At it's smallest, her crop has been about the size of a golf ball... only soft and squishy. Is that normal? After a feeding session, it gets filled to about the size of a plumb or tennis ball. We tried to judge by feeling another hen and rooster of the same breed to see how much they naturally filled their crops, after a day of foraging.

How often should a chicken fill their crop in a day? I'm trying to put weight on this hen, because her breatbone is very apparant. She must have been losing her appetite gradually, but never acted noticeably lethargic. Finally, we realized something was wrong when her comb got all limp and fell over to one side of her face. (She has a large comb for a hen because she's a Blue Andalusian.) Are there any other ways to put weight on a sick bird? She's obviously stressed because she pants almost all the time, even though she's been in the house since yesterday.
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I'm bumping this one. I've got a chicken with a dense, golf ball sized crop who has been acting sluggish and not eating much.
 

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