Chicken standing vertically. Thoughts?

Bonwell

Songster
Oct 26, 2021
274
1,230
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Western New York
Ok so I have a almost 5 Y/o hen, and for the last 2 months, she has been standing at a almost upward angle. I was super concerned at first and tried to find out what it was. Everything I read pointed to her being egg bound, but I couldn't feel one, and she was still acting completely normal otherwise. Good amounts of energy, eating, drinking etc. So eventually I stopped worrying about it because she was literally acting completely fine. As I said its been a little over 2 months at this point but now she has finally taken a turn for the worse, still eating and drinking, but has low energy, seems alot weaker, and now she's Almost standing completely vertically and now the majority of her weight is toward her bottom. I've now separated her from the flock. I should also add, her feet and legs are normal, no issues there either. Any ideas?
IMG_20220214_092933177.jpg
 
Your hen is standing like that because she's in a lot of pain. If you look at her eye in the photo, it has the "look" of a chicken who is feeling extremely unwell, as compared to the bright eyed look of a normal chicken.

Compare her stance with another chicken. Do her legs appear to be wide apart in comparison? Is her abdomen in front and between her legs very swollen? When she walks does she "waddle"?

What does her poop look like? Photo?
 
Your hen is standing like that because she's in a lot of pain. If you look at her eye in the photo, it has the "look" of a chicken who is feeling extremely unwell, as compared to the bright eyed look of a normal chicken.

Compare her stance with another chicken. Do her legs appear to be wide apart in comparison? Is her abdomen in front and between her legs very swollen? When she walks does she "waddle"?

What does her poop look like? Photo?
Yes I agree, she looks like she's in a lot of pain. When she walks, (which is not much right now) she picks her tail up probably about 75% of the way and is almost walking Normally. Her legs I would say are ever so slightly wider apart than a normal hen. Not by much tho. Her abdomen and between her legs are a bit inflated as of right now as well. As for poop I don't know yet, she was in a pen with 30 other chickens until an hour ago, but now she's alone, so once I have a photo, I'll post it. Her rear is 99% clean tho
 
That type of posture looks like a hen who has been laying internally with salpingitis. I would try to make her comfortable and try to get her eating. Antibiotics may be too late. If she gets to a point of no eating or getting picked on by others, I would think about putting her down.
Ok thanks, she still has a normal appetite, at least for now.
 
At 5 years old and already more than two months of suffering, I would put her out of her misery to
At 5 years old and already more than two months of suffering, I would put her out of her misery today.

At 5 years old and already more than two months of suffering, I would put her out of her misery today.
Tbf, she wasn't suffering until very recently. as I said, she was standing at a slightly abnormal angle before, but was a completely normal chicken in every other way. Today was the first day she's been fully vertical and appearing in pain. But if she doesn't improve super soon, I'll have to probably do that.
 
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Tbf, she wasn't suffering until very recently. as I said, she was standing at a slightly abnormal angle before, but was a completely normal chicken in every other way. Today was the first day she's been fully vertical and appearing in pain. But if she doesn't improve super soon, I'll have to probably do that.
As a prey animal, chickens hide their unwellness for a long time. So by the time we finally notice that something is wrong, they are usually too far gone.

Sadly, there will be no improvement for this kind of problem (internal laying/salpingitis/reproductive cancer), and layer hybrids like her are prone to all kinds of incurable reproductive issues.
 
As a prey animal, chickens hide their unwellness for a long time. So by the time we finally notice that something is wrong, they are usually too far gone.

Sadly, there will be no improvement for this kind of problem (internal laying/salpingitis/reproductive cancer), and layer hybrids like her are prone to all kinds of incurable reproductive issues.
Yeah I suppose that's true. Thanks.
 

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