The meds can work really fast if caught soon enough.
-Kathy
-Kathy
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I usually give Clavamox or Baytril with metronidazole if I suspect a secondary infection.Could easily be an Enteritis, (gut infection) easily brought on by stress, the dropping are just showing that the bird has not eaten in the last 24 hours and has no solid material passing through the gut. So definitely a sign something has not been right however unless you have a history of blackhead, could easily be an enteritis which won't always be helped by metrondazole. Giving a general oral antibiotic and a re-hydration salts- the bird is likely to be dehydrated (make sure they are avian salts, human salts are the wrong sort) will help with a bacterial infection followed by a pro-biotic . Don't think an enteritis is mild either it can kill a apparently healthy bird in less that 24 hours with little weight loss or signs.
Enteritis are easily picked up from the environment, and can effect a single bird in a group and no others and that's including birds in reasonably high bio-secure conditions.
Even if it is blackhead, give antibiotics as well, in chickens with blackhead plenty of mortality is by secondary bacterial infection as the blackhead protozoa damages the gut lining, and opens the bird to secondary infection which in its weakened state will kill them.
So, dose with metrondazole but also an anti-biotic, generally penicillin based.
Kathy, One of my Bird Vets came to this forum and read some of the posts. She said that you need to take the Vet books with a grain of salt. They do not give you the proper dosage but they do give you a range of dosage. With that said she stated that most of the off label doses have NOT been tested on the animal stated to give the dose to. This is why they have an A->G at the bottom of the page. She said there is not a lot of bird Vets who know peafowl so experience is the better dosage for your birds. She said that the breeders have been doing it for years and when in doubt do what they do. She said Baytril is not an everyday use drug and should be used as a last resort but even then she said she would try something different. Baytril kills gram negative AND gram positive bacteria. Clavamox, who told you to use that on peafowl? She cannot believe a Vet would tell you to use Baytril on your birds seeing it is banned in poultry. I told her I use it as a last resort and she told me she wouldn't use it then either. I did tell her that I use parrot Baytril and she said she wouldn't use it on parrots as well LOL. I told her I never used Clavamox on a bird and she said not to, something to do with an acid in it but I do not remember what it was cause I don't use it and you need a prescription for it. She told me that we both are right on things as well as wrong on some. LOLI mean this in the nicest way possible as I know you did.According to my *one* of my vets, Baytril would be the preferred drug to treat a gram negative infection, which I think e. Coli is. FWIW, any of my labs and necropsies done that had e.Coli listed, Baytril was one of the few that the e. Coli was sensitive to. Truthfully, I think Clavamox would work just as well, but it is sooooooooo much harder to get and *way* more expensive than a $25 bottle of 10% Baytril.![]()
Yes, both metronidazole and Baytril are banned for use in food animals and should be used under the guidance of a veterinarian, which I always encourage people to do.
-Kathy
I give mine a 1.5ml/cc and that's it and it should clear up the respiratory infection. The best time to catch him is at night time if he is penned. I grab mine and wrap him in a towel while holding the legs. Tie the legs together and he will just lay there for you. Do not uncover his head cause then he will try to get awayWhat are the doses on those I may have both of them but it is very hard getting to pick him up and I have no helpers.