- Jan 11, 2007
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ditto silkie and cyn... only thing I would add is when you add new birds to your flock (not talking about day-old chickies but older birds) the move and stress can really weaken them...many times they will start sneezing, go off their feed and drink and secondary complications will rapidly take hold... so add a good general supplement like aviacharge 2000 and/or polyvisol enfamil (three drops in beak once a day for a week > vit A deficiency often goes hand in hand with respiratory symptoms)
Many indeed do not mess with treatment but simply cull at the first sign of continued illness when the bird cannot recover with basic general support measures such as added supplements. heat oxine etc. (however as I said before these respiratory symptoms often occur with shifts in the weather and with newly acquired birds)
There are many meds to treat resp illness but in chickens tylan seems to be the "general" one that often gives good results
Here is a vet article on respiratory illness and altho much of it will be of little use to you, please note the reference to using tylan and as a mist/nebulization:
http://www.redrobe.com/sharon/avian-respiratory-diseases.html
and here the relavent chapter from avian med:
http://www.avianmedicine.net/ampa/22.pdf
(please do not quote or excerpt online)
It is up to you to decide if you wish to treat or cull. In the future though assume a newly acquired bird will weaken and take general support measures to prevent it getting to this stage.
Many indeed do not mess with treatment but simply cull at the first sign of continued illness when the bird cannot recover with basic general support measures such as added supplements. heat oxine etc. (however as I said before these respiratory symptoms often occur with shifts in the weather and with newly acquired birds)
There are many meds to treat resp illness but in chickens tylan seems to be the "general" one that often gives good results
Here is a vet article on respiratory illness and altho much of it will be of little use to you, please note the reference to using tylan and as a mist/nebulization:
http://www.redrobe.com/sharon/avian-respiratory-diseases.html
and here the relavent chapter from avian med:
http://www.avianmedicine.net/ampa/22.pdf
(please do not quote or excerpt online)
It is up to you to decide if you wish to treat or cull. In the future though assume a newly acquired bird will weaken and take general support measures to prevent it getting to this stage.
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