Helping Hen Through a Vent trauma: My Step-by-Step Recovery Plan

Toffael

Chirping
Oct 27, 2024
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Helping a Hen Through a Vent Issue – My Step-by-Step Recovery Plan

(attached photos show chronological progress with last photo showing full recovery)

About 10 days ago, I found one of my hens with very bloody, thick mucus around her vent. She was lethargic, spaced-out, not eating, and unable to defend herself. Another hen had blood on her head feathers, indicating she’d been pecking the vent area and worsened the injury.

I didn’t know exactly what was wrong, but I immediately separated her and started researching — including asking in this group. Thanks to the advice I received, the most likely cause was a soft-shelled egg, which caused internal damage, followed by external pecking injuries.



🏠 Environment

• Night: Isolated her in a dark, quiet shed until 11am daily to delay egg-laying triggers.

• Day: Placed her in a cage in the shade inside the run so she could still see and hear the flock.

- Gave her a 20 min soak in epsom bath salts twice with 3 day gap

• Gave her 30 mins of supervised free-ranging at 7am each day with her medicated breakfast, and allowed her to join evening free range with the flock to break up her isolation and give her exercise.



🍚 Feeding & Supplements

• 7am medicated small breakfast(for 5 days): A mix of cooked rice, peas, fish (as a bribe to eat it all), chick crumb, 1 crushed calcium carbonate tablet, and vitamin drops.

• 11am feed: With the rest of the flock — but using grower feed or chick crumb, not layer pellets.

• Hydration (Days 1–3): Crushed aspirin tablet in 300ml of water for anti-inflammatory support.



Medication & Topical Care

• Amoxicillin trihydrate:
Crushed 1 × 250mg tablet, mixed into 10ml of water. Gave her 1ml of the solution twice daily via syringe (25mg per dose) for 4 days.

• Topical treatment:
• I initially used turmeric + honey (natural anti-inflammatory), and then sugar, as advised in this group — because I didn’t yet have Vetericyn in stock.

• Once Vetericyn arrived, I washed the vent gently with saline and applied twice a day for the next several days.

If I’d had Vetericyn from the beginning, I would have used it from Day 1. I highly recommend keeping it stocked in your poultry first-aid kit — it made a big difference.

By Day 5 after start of treatments, once her swelling had gone down, she was much more alert, eating well, and acting like herself again. i gave her a bath with some mild children’s shampoo, gently washing all her vent feathers so they were cleansed of all the mucus and goop that was clumping it all together.



Recovery & Key Takeaways

After about a week, after i considered her fully recovered, she was safely reintroduced to the flock, and sleeping in coop, and reasserting herself into pecking order.

What I Learned:

• Act immediately and learn fast— you can adjust your approach as you learn more.

• Soft-shelled eggs can be dangerous, and often cause both internal and external injury.

• Amoxicillin + Vetericyn were the most effective combination.

• Isolation with visibility, daily routines, and hydration were all important.

• Keep essentials like Vetericyn and vitamin drops on hand — it’ll save you stress later.

If anyone’s dealing with a similar situation, feel free to message — happy to share what helped.
 

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You should consider creating an article with this post. Kudos on the Vetericyn and vitamins! We use that and Poultry Cell mostly, but only had one incident of needing the Vetericyn.

My only question though, you didn't mention infection, so I wonder why the Amoxicillin? Was that just in case she had an infection inside from the soft shell egg remaining inside her?
 
You should consider creating an article with this post. Kudos on the Vetericyn and vitamins! We use that and Poultry Cell mostly, but only had one incident of needing the Vetericyn.

My only question though, you didn't mention infection, so I wonder why the Amoxicillin? Was that just in case she had an infection inside from the soft shell egg remaining inside her?
you mean an ‘article’ for this forum? how do i do that?

Yes, i used amoxicillin as i read that if soft shell egg imploded inside her, it can lacerate her oviduct leading to internal bacterial infection. So amoxicillin for internal bacterial infections and vetericyn for any external bacterial infections.

And Calcium D3 tablets to quickly increase her calcium reserves
 

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