Chick with yolk sac issue

A roo or two

Chirping
6 Years
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I had a chick that had issues hatching, it needed assistance, as it became shrink wrapped in the shell even though it did not have an external pip when the incubator had been opened to check the viability of the remaining eggs. We ended up having to perform the external pip for it and that is when we saw it had the shrink wrap issue.

Now I am new to all this but read and read and read prior to even setting eggs all about how you guys handle different hatching situations on BYC. I delicately pulled away the shell and the outer white membrane, watched the inner membrane for any active blood vessels, stopped when I saw them, wrapped it in a damp paper towel and then check again in a little while. This process was slow, lasted all night. I knew better than to rush it. I saw that his yolk sac was maybe half way drawn in so I just completely stopped everything, allowed him to rest wrapped in a paper towel with the remaining half of his shell. Eventually I heard him in there chirping his head off, checked on him and he was dragging himself around a little with his umbilical cord still attached to the egg. I checked, his yolk sac was now about the size of a pencil eraser, saw this as a good sign. Since his umbilical cord was still an active vessel I placed him in a tiny bowl with a moist paper towel under him so he wouldn't hurt himself dragging around the shell, and so that his sac would stay moist and placed him back in the bator. I had to leave the house for half the day. When I returned he was still in the bowl, I lifted him up, his umbilical cord was dry but did not detach so I clipped it about an inch from his body but when doing so I notice he had a bump about half the size of a BB that was kind of dry looking. I don't know if this is a hernia or part of the yolk sac, looks more red than yolk-like. I applied some Neosporin and have left him be. I know survival of the fittest and all but wanted to see if there was anything more I could do? Will this eventually withdrawal? Dry up and scab off? Is it always certain to be a death sentence?

He is active, chirping, moving around. Not quite the most excellent balance yet after all that work but he's getting there.
 
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Just curious what was your humidity with him? I had this happen to two of my 45 chicks. Not the yolk and assistance part but the umbellical cord still attatched. In our small brooder with all the babies in there the humidity got up to like 80 and I couldnt bring it down my last chick was dried to half her shell she absorbed her yolk and umbellical cord was not attatched but I had to peel her shell off her back she still has some really dry membrane on her back I need to wet her down and loosen it I gues.
 
Just curious what was your humidity with him? I had this happen to two of my 45 chicks. Not the yolk and assistance part but the umbellical cord still attatched. In our small brooder with all the babies in there the humidity got up to like 80 and I couldnt bring it down my last chick was dried to half her shell she absorbed her yolk and umbellical cord was not attatched but I had to peel her shell off her back she still has some really dry membrane on her back I need to wet her down and loosen it I gues.
My humidity was at about 58 just prior to hatching on lockdown, then it was up to about 80*, dropped down to upper 60s/low 70s between each hatch. I had a couple do this in my last hatch also but it detached rather quickly. One other one during this hatch had to have it's clipped but it had already absorbed the yolk completely prior to hatching.

Awe :( Poor thing. The paper towel seemed to keep everything from sticking. I had one that had a tiny bit of goo stuck to his back but I just wet my finger and rubbed at it and it came right off.
 

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