- Mar 26, 2010
- 9
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Hello all. Bear with me, these are my first ever chickens...I have 6 (2 Cochin, 4 RIR).
I have a 3-3 1/2 week old Cochin, who started having problems last week with swallowing, was squawking in pain, scratching at her face, then was not eating or drinking and acting lethargic. She did get a hard bump when she was put back in the brooder - she flew out of my hand and hit the cardboard and her leg on the feeder. It was about 15-20 minutes later that she started with the awful squawking. I was thinking maybe she strained her neck? She acted like she was having trouble swallowing/choke so that afternoon she was taken to the vet - in case of any major injury - but could not find any obvious breaks, nothing lodged in throat, but had some tenderness on her left side. She was tube fed directly into her crop and sent home. Returned the next day for more tube feeding - she lost 10 gm body weight over night. She was sent home with some powdered food that she was given (mixed with warm water) with a small dose syringe. After that she perked up and though still sleeping a lot, was pooping up a storm and her crop was full and she was drinking, becoming more active and no longer keeping away from the other chicks. She is now about 1/2 the size of the other chicks. She seemed to be getting back to normal ~80% until this morning when she started with the gaping beak, head shaking, and had a lot of viscous fluid (saliva?) with some food bits. Sometimes it is just water coming back up. It has no smell, it is clear, not foamy, but it is very "stringy". I figure she was just regurgitating. But she seems to be in a small amount of distress when she begins the head shaking. And she has been extremely vocal since this all started. This morning she had one very wet/liquid stool which was uniformly dark brown (almost black) then later in the day, two small more solid stools w/white - more normal in color, but dry consistency (not pasty) and small volume. No blood in stool from what I could see. She has no palpable tenderness.
She has another appointment tomorrow with the vet - I am hoping that something may be more apparent. I don't want her to suffer, but since she had 2 1/2 days (at least) of doing well, I want to give her another chance - even if it is just a check up and more tube feeding. I don't want her to lose any more body mass.
Has anyone else experienced this type of problem? Is the viscous "saliva" normal? I thought I had read somewhere that the crop produces saliva, and sometimes if they have too much water, then lower their head to eat, it may come back up. I would think that if she was born with a defect she would not have thrived (she was always a smidge smaller than the other Cochin, but not enough to be able to say "Oh - that's her!"). She seems to be able to turn her neck in all directions, can preen her wing feathers, but she doesn't crane her neck up as much as the other chicks (and honestly, I don't remember if she did or not previously.)
Any ideas would be appreciated! Thanks! And of course, I will post an update after our vet visit - I am extremely lucky to have an avian vet 5 minutes from me!
-Jen
I have a 3-3 1/2 week old Cochin, who started having problems last week with swallowing, was squawking in pain, scratching at her face, then was not eating or drinking and acting lethargic. She did get a hard bump when she was put back in the brooder - she flew out of my hand and hit the cardboard and her leg on the feeder. It was about 15-20 minutes later that she started with the awful squawking. I was thinking maybe she strained her neck? She acted like she was having trouble swallowing/choke so that afternoon she was taken to the vet - in case of any major injury - but could not find any obvious breaks, nothing lodged in throat, but had some tenderness on her left side. She was tube fed directly into her crop and sent home. Returned the next day for more tube feeding - she lost 10 gm body weight over night. She was sent home with some powdered food that she was given (mixed with warm water) with a small dose syringe. After that she perked up and though still sleeping a lot, was pooping up a storm and her crop was full and she was drinking, becoming more active and no longer keeping away from the other chicks. She is now about 1/2 the size of the other chicks. She seemed to be getting back to normal ~80% until this morning when she started with the gaping beak, head shaking, and had a lot of viscous fluid (saliva?) with some food bits. Sometimes it is just water coming back up. It has no smell, it is clear, not foamy, but it is very "stringy". I figure she was just regurgitating. But she seems to be in a small amount of distress when she begins the head shaking. And she has been extremely vocal since this all started. This morning she had one very wet/liquid stool which was uniformly dark brown (almost black) then later in the day, two small more solid stools w/white - more normal in color, but dry consistency (not pasty) and small volume. No blood in stool from what I could see. She has no palpable tenderness.
She has another appointment tomorrow with the vet - I am hoping that something may be more apparent. I don't want her to suffer, but since she had 2 1/2 days (at least) of doing well, I want to give her another chance - even if it is just a check up and more tube feeding. I don't want her to lose any more body mass.
Has anyone else experienced this type of problem? Is the viscous "saliva" normal? I thought I had read somewhere that the crop produces saliva, and sometimes if they have too much water, then lower their head to eat, it may come back up. I would think that if she was born with a defect she would not have thrived (she was always a smidge smaller than the other Cochin, but not enough to be able to say "Oh - that's her!"). She seems to be able to turn her neck in all directions, can preen her wing feathers, but she doesn't crane her neck up as much as the other chicks (and honestly, I don't remember if she did or not previously.)
Any ideas would be appreciated! Thanks! And of course, I will post an update after our vet visit - I am extremely lucky to have an avian vet 5 minutes from me!
-Jen