- Jul 3, 2011
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Wanted to post this for those of you whose chickens are demonstrating symptoms of tumors, which are sadly common as birds age, especially reproductive tumors in hens. I had an 8-year-old black Australorp, Ginny, who in January slowed down greatly, then stopped eating and drinking, then walking. I suspected cancer due to age, immobility due to impingement by tumors. Over two months, she waxed and waned, first spontaneously improving after five days not eating or drinking, and then helped by meloxicam.
But the remarkable part of her journey was using dexamethasone after the meloxicam ceased being effective. A steroid and powerful anti-inflammatory, dex requires an RX but is inexpensive and can be given orally. (I put drops on bread, wrapped in a little raw burger and "pilled" it.) Poultry DVM notes it can be especially effective in relieving cancer symptoms and this was certainly the case with my girl. I saw mild improvement within hours of the first dose, and big improvement within a day. Then for three weeks, it fully restored mobility, appetite, drinking, poop formation; she appeared in every way a healthy hen again, and even gained weight. It was as close to a miracle drug as I've ever seen. Unfortunately, it quit working as tumors (presumably) progressed and pain and immobility reasserted; with no options left, she was euthanized. But she lived to see her 9th birthday.
Here is the Poultry DVM link on dex, including dosage: https://poultrydvm.com/drugs/dexamethasone
My chicken vet says it doesn't work for all hens, but for some it lasts even longer than it did for Ginny. I will always be grateful for those few extra weeks of high-quality life it gave her. Worth trying, for certain, before you surrender to the inevitable.
But the remarkable part of her journey was using dexamethasone after the meloxicam ceased being effective. A steroid and powerful anti-inflammatory, dex requires an RX but is inexpensive and can be given orally. (I put drops on bread, wrapped in a little raw burger and "pilled" it.) Poultry DVM notes it can be especially effective in relieving cancer symptoms and this was certainly the case with my girl. I saw mild improvement within hours of the first dose, and big improvement within a day. Then for three weeks, it fully restored mobility, appetite, drinking, poop formation; she appeared in every way a healthy hen again, and even gained weight. It was as close to a miracle drug as I've ever seen. Unfortunately, it quit working as tumors (presumably) progressed and pain and immobility reasserted; with no options left, she was euthanized. But she lived to see her 9th birthday.
Here is the Poultry DVM link on dex, including dosage: https://poultrydvm.com/drugs/dexamethasone
My chicken vet says it doesn't work for all hens, but for some it lasts even longer than it did for Ginny. I will always be grateful for those few extra weeks of high-quality life it gave her. Worth trying, for certain, before you surrender to the inevitable.
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