Blackhead disease prevention 6/6/2015

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Ok... I have 250mg metronidizole tablets and baytril... Also have safeguard dewormer. This turkey will not be used for meat as I know you can't use metronidizole for birds intended for meat. This baby turkey as well as our other turkeys (adults) are all pet birds.
Metronidazole - 23 mg per pound once a day for 5 days
Baytril - 4.5 mg per pound twice a day

Can you tube feed?
 
What about the safeguard, should I use it? Havn't ever done tube feeding... Not very confident as far as that goes.
 
Ok... The baby turk weighs 1lb. 1 ounce. So the safeguard is only once and repeat in 10 days and not once a day for the 5 days and repeat in 10 days like it is for the adults?
 
Ok... The baby turk weighs 1lb. 1 ounce. So the safeguard is only once and repeat in 10 days and not once a day for the 5 days and repeat in 10 days like it is for the adults?
Once and repeat. One treatment is all that's needed to treat the cecal worm
Is the baytril 2x/day for 5 days?
Yes
Not sure about baytril dose in ml.
What Baytril do you have? One pound one ounce = 480 grams, so If you have the 10% (100mg/ml) it's 0.48 x 10 / 100 = 0.048 ml twice a day. GO ahead and round up to 0.05 ml twice a day.


syringe_2.jpg
 
I get FDA updates and they just came out with one on blackhead. No treatments that they approve.
Last Updated: 06/01/2018
https://www.fda.gov/AnimalVeterinar...eadDisease&utm_medium=email&utm_source=Eloqua

in case it will not open here it is:

Blackhead disease (histomoniasis) is an important poultry disease that affects turkeys, chickens, peafowl, and game birds such as partridges, pheasants, and quail. The disease is caused by Histomonas meleagridis, a protozoan that is transmitted to the bird by the parasite Heterakis gallinarum, a type of nematode, or roundworm.

Lifecycle and Clinical Signs
The lifecycle of H. meleagridis is complex. The protozoa multiply in an infected bird’s cecum (a part of its digestive tract). The protozoa move to the bird’s intestines where the roundworm H. gallinarum lives. The roundworm eats the protozoa, causing the roundworm’s eggs to become infected with H. meleagridis. The protozoal-infected eggs are then shed in the bird’s droppings.

Healthy birds become infected with H. meleagridis when they eat food, invertebrates (such as earthworms), or bird droppings that are contaminated with the protozoa. Direct bird-to-bird transmission can also occur within a flock. Because chickens, partridges, and pheasants commonly have the roundworm H. gallinarum in their intestines, they often are the source of the protozoal infection for other birds.

Birds with blackhead disease are usually listless and have drooping wings, unkempt feathers, and yellow droppings. Typically, the cecum and liver of an infected bird will become inflamed and develop ulcers. Young birds become sick quickly and usually die within a few days after clinical signs appear. The disease develops more slowly in older birds and they often become emaciated and may eventually die.

Turkeys are highly susceptible to blackhead disease. Once a turkey flock has been infected, mortality can reach 70 to 100%. A survey of professionals representing the U.S. turkey industry reported at least 50 outbreaks of the disease each year since 2009.1 Blackhead disease is less severe in chickens but can lead to poor health and reduced egg production.

No Approved Treatments
Histostat (nitarsone), an arsenic-based animal drug, was the only FDA-approved drug to prevent blackhead disease in poultry. But in 2015, the drug company voluntarily stopped marketing Histostat and requested withdrawal of the drug’s approval due to concerns about inorganic arsenic levels in treated birds. Currently, there are no animal drugs approved to prevent, treat, or control blackhead disease in the U.S.

More Information on the withdrawal of Histostat (nitarsone):

What is FDA doing about the lack of approved drugs against blackhead disease in poultry?
FDA is involved in an outreach effort to raise awareness about the lack of approved drugs against blackhead disease in poultry. As part of this outreach effort, the agency has:

  • Presented posters at poultry scientific and industry meetings

    At various meetings of poultry scientists, poultry industry professionals, and animal drug companies, FDA has presented posters about the agency’s concerns regarding the lack of approved drugs against blackhead disease in poultry. The posters also highlighted the potential approval pathways available for new animal drugs to treat, control, or prevent the disease.

    FDA’s posters about blackhead disease:
  • Met with poultry industry professionals and animal drug companies

    FDA has met with the National Turkey Federation, the American Association of Avian Pathologists (AAAP), poultry veterinarians, and researchers working in the poultry field to discuss the lack of approved drugs against blackhead disease. FDA has also met with animal drug companies to discuss the potential approval pathways available for new animal drugs to treat, control, or prevent the disease.
  • Supported AAAP’s blackhead disease symposium

    In August 2016, FDA participated in a symposium on blackhead disease hosted by AAAP. FDA sponsored video conferencing of the symposium, which allowed many participants, both inside and outside FDA, to attend virtually. The symposium provided a much-needed platform for poultry researchers, poultry industry professionals, and animal drug companies to share information about the status of blackhead disease, research updates, and strategies to prevent and control the disease.
  • Published a paper on regulatory considerations for drugs against blackhead disease

    FDA published a peer-reviewed paper in the journal Avian Diseases outlining FDA’s regulatory process for approving new animal drugs against blackhead disease in turkeys, chickens, and game birds. The paper also discussed the various incentives available to drug companies for developing drugs for minor species or minor uses in a major species. Drug companies can potentially use these incentives to work toward a streamlined approval of drugs against blackhead disease.

    FDA’s paper in Avian Diseases:
Because of this outreach effort, FDA thinks that more people are aware of the lack of treatments against blackhead disease in poultry. FDA encourages academic institutions, the poultry industry, and animal drug companies to work together to identify and invest in promising therapies, such as drugs or vaccines, to treat, control, or prevent the disease. The agency also encourages these groups to work with FDA to ensure their research efforts align with the requirements for drug approval (or to work with the U.S. Department of Agriculture for vaccine development). This collaboration will hopefully lead to much needed safe and effective approved therapies against blackhead disease getting to the marketplace efficiently and quickly.

If you have questions, please contact Dr. Prajwal Regmi at [email protected].
 
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/17450390600884500
Abstract
Histomoniasis (infectious enterohepatitis, blackhead) is caused by the protozoan parasite Histomonas meleagridis (H. meleagridis). After the ban of all prophylactic and therapeutic drugs in the European Union, histomoniasis is increasingly responsible for considerable economic problems to the poultry industry. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of a herbal product with extracts from cinnamon, garlic, lemon, and rosemary on H. meleagridis in turkey poults in vivo. For this purpose, 60 two-week-old poults were divided into three groups. Group 1 received the herbal product in the feed six days before infection and in water three days before infection, then in feed and drinking water until the end of the experiment. Groups 2 and 3 were left untreated. At week 3 of age, Groups 1 and 2 were infected intracloacally with H. meleagridis. Three weeks after infection the surviving birds were euthanized and examined for pathological lesions. Mortality was 20% in Group 1 and 50% in Group 2. There were no deaths in Group 3. DNA of histomonads was detected in all examined caeca and livers of the dead birds, but was not detected in any examined organ of the surviving birds of all groups. There was no noticeable difference in the lesion scores of the dead birds between the groups. The surviving birds of all groups did not show lesions post mortem. Since all effective prophylactic and therapeutic drugs against histomoniasis were banned in the EU, under given conditions the investigated herbal product seems to be an effective alternative for the reduction of mortality in turkeys caused by histomoniasis.
 

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