Bloated, slow moving chicken with dirty butt

Lyranonamous

Songster
11 Years
Nov 23, 2013
156
160
206
Freeville NY (near Ithaca)
We noticed a Saturday AM that a three yr old Speckled Sussex looks like a balloon and was moving very slowly. A few hours later she was lying down when the other 9 were not.
I did as much research as I could and decided to give her a bath because her butt was dirty and maybe it was vent gleet. During the bath some small white mites? did come off her onto us. (I don't even want to think about that part yet) There was some yellowish stuff below her vent that could be mites, but could have been poop. During the bath she got some keifer and some shelled sunflower seeds-just to get her to eat yogurt. After the bath I held her in a towel and massaged her crop which was mushy, like a water balloon. I did not induce vomiting. After I brought her inside she pooped a clear liquid with some yellowish stuff in it (I hope this was not a broken egg inside her-but could have been). She also seemed to be straining to poop more.
She stayed inside all night and I gave her some tuna in oil which she ate...I hoped the oil would help if she had an impacted crop. She seemed to love it-and ate a lot of it. We made her drink as much water as we could, both dropping in her beak and also just putting her beak into the water (avoiding the nostrils) which worked better-she drank more that way.
Sunday AM the crop was still a bit mushy but clearly less than than the previous night (maybe 1/8 of previous night). I'm assuming things were moving through her, altho I don't really know what a crop should feel like. She did poop a few times during the night but small amounts, some with the clear liquid in them. No blood or anything alarming.

Sunday PM I decided to put her outside with the rest hoping that moving around would get her to poop again, or otherwise help. At night she went in the coop with the rest of them but did not get up on the roost.
In the AM today she was up and came out but is clearly still bloated and slow. It seems her pecking order is now at the bottom, but she did eat some chicken feed mixed with water after the rest of them left it. She is picking up some things to eat and preening a little, but not really scratching for food. Her butt has poop on it again-which is disturbing. But at least she has pooped.
I'm at a loss. My first guesses were impacted crop (but no smell so I'm not assuming sour crop) and vent gleet (altho again there is no smell) She is so bloated that clearly something is wrong.
They all need a bath because 2 or 3 more have dirty butts, but we have yet to have a sunny day when we are home, so we have been putting that off.

Anyone know what I can try next? What do you suspect is happening? Should she quarantined or better to be outside, moving around and being a chicken?
I will post photos if I can figure out how to do so.
Thanks in advance for any help
 
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Hi everyone, I was lucky to find an "exotic" animal vet a few towns away. Before that I was on the phone with Cornell Vet School. With both vets I asked as many questions as possible so I could pass on.
First, we are all assuming this is Egg Yolk Peritonitis....if I find out differently I will post that. We can't know without x-rays. The exotic vet said that was the most common reason she sees chickens.
I asked about the epsom salt enema (posted somewhere here) and was advised against it because the infection can be pushed further into the chicken. I suppose if there is no vet and no alternative it could be considered-but it seems there is a risk of making things worse.
Second, I asked about our method of getting water into her. We raised a cup of water onto her beak (below nostrils). This made her drink. I was told it was safe. Another suggestion was to use a dropper or syringe and squirt it perpendicular to the beak (so not right down her throat) She can swallow or not, and if not it goes out the other side so it's no problem. This seems safer than right down the throat....There are probably youtube videos on this.
Third, she was given subcutaneous fluids, (she was not so happy about that) pain meds and antibiotics. I was told to get as much fluid as possible into her (water and yogurt so far and I'm thinking pumpkin too) Also feed her what ever she likes. I plan to put the meds into the pumpkin or tuna.
I asked about some meds to make her never lay an egg again. It exists (it's used on macaws or some similar bird, I don't recall) and might be needed for her, but this sickness alone could make her never lay eggs again depending on how damaged she is. I hope that's true. I prefer no eggs to having her go through this again.
Calcium might be the reason this happened, so maybe more oyster shells free choice.
Also the cause can be stress or other illnesses.
She is separated from the rest for treatment, and hopefully will recover. I will update with results

Thanks for all the advice on here.
 

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