Bumble Foot?

CrockChickens9

Songster
Sep 1, 2024
123
113
101
New Hampshire
I’m assuming this is bumble foot? It doesn’t appear to be deep or too painful for her. It seems like I could pull the lesion off but it may bleed if I do. Should I soak this and try to remove it? What should I put on it and do I wrap it? She’s not limping. She’s a Brahma and she is very heavy. I clean the coop and run daily. Sand is my substrate. It has been a rainy summer so far. I would appreciate any guidance since this is my first flock and first experience with bumble foot. Thanks in advance!
 

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I’m assuming this is bumble foot? It doesn’t appear to be deep or too painful for her. It seems like I could pull the lesion off but it may bleed if I do. Should I soak this and try to remove it? What should I put on it and do I wrap it? She’s not limping. She’s a Brahma and she is very heavy. I clean the coop and run daily. Sand is my substrate. It has been a rainy summer so far. I would appreciate any guidance since this is my first flock and first experience with bumble foot. Thanks in advance!
Yes, that is bumblefoot.

Although it may seem easy and painless to remove, I would soak her foot in an Epsom salt bath with a little bit of dish soap first. This will clean her foot up and help soften the plug. Ideally you’d want the scab to be soft enough to pull out and not have to force out too much. If it doesn’t want to release after soaking, you can wrap with some ointment and try soaking again and to remove tomorrow. It may take a few days to soften enough to remove. You may get less bleeding if it’s softer to remove and doesn’t rip as much skin around the entrance.

Once the plug is removed, you will want to get as much pus out as possible as that is the infection. Feel all around the hole for hard material (as chicken pus is hard like cheese) and try to remove all of it. Again, more soaking may be needed to get the pus material to come to the surface once the plug is removed.

Once the pus is removed, or if you need to try soaking and removing more tomorrow again, pack the hole with a triple antibiotic ointment (w/out pain relief) such as neosporin or something such as prid drawing salve. I usually pack with both. Then place a little gauze over the hole and wrap the foot very carefully with vet wrap. You will need to be sure to check very carefully that circulation is still in tact and the foot isn’t wrapped too tight. We’ve seen chickens lose parts of their foot when wrapped too tightly. Also do not leave the wrap on for more than a day as they slip and shift easily and can cut off circulation that way, too.

This whole process may take weeks or even months to get to a completely healed foot. Some chickens are just more prone to bumblefoot due to size or other health issues.
 

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