TropicalChickies
Crowing
All three of the diseases they tested positive for are potentially fatal. And they are known to kill in exactly the way your flock has been reduced -- one death at a time.We received some preliminary reports this morning.
Positive for:
Turkey Hemorragic Enteritis Virus
Avian Mycoplasma synoviae
Avian Mycoplasma gallisepticum
Negative for:
Infectious Bursal Disease Virus
Avian Pneumovirus
Infectious Bronchitis Virus
Avian Mycoplasma meleagradis
Any comments on this would be appreciated. I am reading a lot, but of course the scientific data is over my head. I will look over the resources provided on this site. I will be calling the lab shortly to ask a few questions...I do not see that they've tested for Marek's, but maybe that takes longer? (I was told it will take abput 3 weeks for final results.)
The upside: MS and MG are bacterial infections. And enteritis usually causes secondary bacterial infections that are more dangerous than the virus itself.
This means a round of antibiotics for everyone will only help at this point and not be in vain.
Now you need to decide which antibiotic and how to administer it. I believe amoxicillin is used most often for enteritis, but do some research. MS and MG can be tough to treat as they are known to be antibiotic resistant, but now that you know you have bacterial infections present, at least you know that antibiotics are what you need to use.
It can be confusing. There's many antibiotics out there -- tetracyclines, floaxins, etc. I'm sure others here can advise on what has worked for them. Doxycycline is often recommended for respiratory infections in particular.
Btw, you don't need "chicken antibiotics"! Any "broad spectrum" human versions will likely help get this under control and at least reduce the mortality in your group.
Good to have some answer at last for you to work with.
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