SilkieSisters
Songster
- Sep 4, 2018
- 151
- 213
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For awhile one of my hens has been limping when she walks. It's clear that she has bumblefoot in one foot and I got the supplies together to get hopefully get rid of the infection.This was my first chicken with bumblefoot so I'm new to this. I started by cleaning her foot in a warm epsom salt bath for about 5 minutes.
The plug was very obvious. I cleaned her foot with betadine and used a scalpel to cut around it. I was able to get it out along with some yellow cheesy stuff. There wasn't too much of it and nothing more came out when I pushed on other parts of the foot. There is still two other lumps in her foot that are hard and when I tried cutting to get to see what was in her foot, she started bleeding and it wouldn't stop. I rinsed it out multiple times with water, but it kept bleeding. I definitely thought that there might be more infection in those spots but I just couldn't see any more yellow tissue.
This was all that I was able to get out and her foot is still very big. I didn't want to keep hurting her and making her bleed if it wasn't doing any good. I wasn't sure if I should continue cutting into her foot to see if there's still infection or wait and ask and then keep working on it tomorrow. For now I filled the hole with Neosporin and bandaged it up. When I put her outside she was walking around a bit better than before. The question is . . . what should I do next to further take care of her foot to get rid of the infection?
The plug was very obvious. I cleaned her foot with betadine and used a scalpel to cut around it. I was able to get it out along with some yellow cheesy stuff. There wasn't too much of it and nothing more came out when I pushed on other parts of the foot. There is still two other lumps in her foot that are hard and when I tried cutting to get to see what was in her foot, she started bleeding and it wouldn't stop. I rinsed it out multiple times with water, but it kept bleeding. I definitely thought that there might be more infection in those spots but I just couldn't see any more yellow tissue.
This was all that I was able to get out and her foot is still very big. I didn't want to keep hurting her and making her bleed if it wasn't doing any good. I wasn't sure if I should continue cutting into her foot to see if there's still infection or wait and ask and then keep working on it tomorrow. For now I filled the hole with Neosporin and bandaged it up. When I put her outside she was walking around a bit better than before. The question is . . . what should I do next to further take care of her foot to get rid of the infection?
