she has been waddling, getting bigger, eating less & is now almost shutting down.
Bcuz sprinkling the coop & boxes w/diatomaceous earth hasn’t done much to decrease our bug issue
I just ran into feeling a huge, bulbous mass of flesh in her & was afraid to hurt her by venturing further.
But to pick her up, Omgosh I can only imagine how much she’s hurting bcuz she literally feels so distended that one hard poke & she might actually POP!
—-I don’t feel an egg...but I also don’t know if I’m in far enuf cuz I’m terrified of hurting her...after her rocky white pebble-like poop came out that seemed stuck...I just ran into a little bloody mucus(?)...and it’s a puffy ball of tissue, as I can best describe it
she’s really as tight as a basketball under there I feel so terrible I can’t seem to help her!
I'm sorry to hear about your hen.I think that even if you were able to get more out, it's going to be a drop in the bucket, so to speak. If it's lash egg material, it can be very firm, not water soluble, and I think there would be risk of rupturing something in the process, not to mention the discomfort likely. I have read of cases where masses of matter were surgically removed in the case of internal laying, but they were less advanced than this. Surgery would come with a high risk also.
I agree with @coach723 from your description, she has a reproductive problem. The bloody mucous and puffy ball of tissue, to me sounds like Salpingitis. Your mention of the hen's abdomen being so full/distended and tight your afraid it might pop, sounds like she also may have Ascites which is fluid in the abdomen, this often is another symptom/condition that accompanies the various reproductive problems a hen can have.
The pressure in the abdomen is likely pressing on her internal organs, making her shut down. Draining and antibiotics are a very short term fix with most repro problems. If you are seeing bloody mucous along with a great deal of swelling/discomfort, sometimes the best solution is to put the hen out of her misery. Not a line of thinking that is very popular, but sometimes we have to think about then hen's quality of life and how much longer we want them to suffer while we are trying to fix them, even if the fix is just a short period of time.
For your bug problem - you need to treat each chicken in 7 day intervals with a permethrin based spray or dust. Clean out the housing and treat it as well.
Since you are dealing with a large number of bird, it would be more economical to buy a concentrate, then mix according to the direction on the label. Look at your local Tractor Supply.
Just my 2¢