Airyaman
Songster
I recently lost a pullet to some type of what I believed to be a respiratory issue.
Let me back up slightly: I think Marek's exists in the my flocks. I have not confirmed it but all of the signs point that way in a subflock. The following is about a girl who is not in that subflock.
One day the pullet was in the woods more often than usual. Then the next day she was making a funny sound when she breathed. Other than that I think things were normal. The next day she was chased by a cockerel and it took her a while to catch her breath and breathe normally. Later that day, it happened again, and she really never recovered after that.
I put her in isolation for two days and treated her with VetRX (it was all I had over a holiday weekend). She died shortly after.
When the AL state lab did a necroscopy, no Marek's signs, no infections, just a curved keel?
Could a curved keel end up being fatal in the description above?
Let me back up slightly: I think Marek's exists in the my flocks. I have not confirmed it but all of the signs point that way in a subflock. The following is about a girl who is not in that subflock.
One day the pullet was in the woods more often than usual. Then the next day she was making a funny sound when she breathed. Other than that I think things were normal. The next day she was chased by a cockerel and it took her a while to catch her breath and breathe normally. Later that day, it happened again, and she really never recovered after that.
I put her in isolation for two days and treated her with VetRX (it was all I had over a holiday weekend). She died shortly after.
When the AL state lab did a necroscopy, no Marek's signs, no infections, just a curved keel?
Could a curved keel end up being fatal in the description above?
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