- Jun 9, 2009
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This looks like either an uninfected cut, or early bumblefoot. Compare carefully to her other foot. If no swelling and if you cannot feel a hardened kernel in the affected foot, then surgery is not needed. I've followed many threads on bumblefoot. Surgery is painful for the bird, as you are not using an anesthetic, and I would do it only if necessary. Surgery is needed to remove a hardened kernel, but if there is only swelling and no kernel, then there is a good chance soaking alone will do the trick.
These scabs sometimes heal on their own, but I would not risk it, because if it is early bumblefoot and progresses to more advanced bumblefoot, it will be much harder to treat (would need surgery). So I would continue the soaks. It takes at least 5 days for the scab to fall off on its own. If all you do is soak, you do not need to wrap it, because it is scabbed over. If you create an open wound by picking or cutting, you need to wrap, to prevent bacteria from entering.
Some people have success with epsom salt soaks. Others use TricideNeo, which worked wonders for me on a hen with 2 black spots and a moderate swelling. Scabs fell off after about a week, and it was totally healed underneath. I continued the soaks for 10 days, and the hen has been free of bumblefoot for the past year. I never picked, cut, or wrapped anyrthing. I've read that other people soaked for a month to get it heal completely. Once a day is sufficient. I soaked in TricideNeo only 5-10 minutes a day.
These scabs sometimes heal on their own, but I would not risk it, because if it is early bumblefoot and progresses to more advanced bumblefoot, it will be much harder to treat (would need surgery). So I would continue the soaks. It takes at least 5 days for the scab to fall off on its own. If all you do is soak, you do not need to wrap it, because it is scabbed over. If you create an open wound by picking or cutting, you need to wrap, to prevent bacteria from entering.
Some people have success with epsom salt soaks. Others use TricideNeo, which worked wonders for me on a hen with 2 black spots and a moderate swelling. Scabs fell off after about a week, and it was totally healed underneath. I continued the soaks for 10 days, and the hen has been free of bumblefoot for the past year. I never picked, cut, or wrapped anyrthing. I've read that other people soaked for a month to get it heal completely. Once a day is sufficient. I soaked in TricideNeo only 5-10 minutes a day.
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