Hen has some kind of maggots, need advice quick

Hey Nif - I'm so sorry I just read this! But it sounds like you have it under control. First, chickens rarely get proud flesh unlike horses because their method of granulation is different. When I had a hen that had particularly nasty wounds, I have used Granulex on them - but really prefer just to thoroughly clean the wound first - with H2O2 on punctures (diluted with water, flushing with a syringe) and then a followup wound flush with iodine and water mixed into a light iced tea colored solution. I don't rinse the weak iodine solution off - I pat dry to allow the iodine to work. Then I usually use neosporin, but if you have furazone ointment, or Swat, those work too. I feel neosporin does the best job, and then for flies like to use a Screw Worm Wound Spray that you get in the cattle section of the feedstore. Just a touch.

If you get maggots, do as you did. Only to help protect the wound, try suffocating them out with honey. That way you don't burn the flesh too much. That being said, when they're lodged in there you do want to get them out and if a little flesh is burned that time, so be it. So are the germs - they're oxidized by the extra oxygen molecule in H2O2. THen reclean with the weak iodine solution, redress the wounds, smooth the neosporin over, and use Swat on top or the screw worm spray.

For antibiotics, penicillin is the drug of choice for wounds unless you can get Baytril from a vet - however - Baytril won't handle cat bites, and it's too easy to have bacteria become resistant to it so I'm very very reluctant to use it unless I have to, absolutely HAVE to. Even if I do, if there's a cat bite I always use penicillin as that's the protocol for the germs in cat mouths (pasteurella) which are resistant to baytril.

I'll include two articles below - the wound one you'ore really past, but it'll help if you need the information. I'd just keep the wound coated in the neosporin and keep her up for 2 days if you can (Or covered with swat on all wounds) to keep flies from blowing the wounds.

The second one is how to use penicillin, specifically penicillin G procaine which is readily found in most feed store fridges. If you get another penicillin injection, the supplies/method are the same - the dosage might be different.

Use your nose now and smell her freshly cleaned wound. They smell funky, but it's good to know what "healthy" funky smells like as opposed to bad funky. You'll use your eyes and nose to continue to do such a good job of taking care of her.

If you get some dead flesh, cut it off with cuticle scissors, use granulex to get the rest off - then you don't even have to reapply anything but the fly-repelling stuff. Granulex is both a debriding medicine and an antiseptic but should only be used where there is definite bits of dying flesh - never on a good healing wound.

Wonder dust - if you're going to use a product like that, I'd recommend alu-shield instead. The reason being is that wonder dust really doesn't do much for the wounds and is really a lot more hard to apply to poultry than a horse. It's a shame we can't still get Furox spray - as that stuff was awesome! But alu-shield can work on top of punctures.

By the way - recheck every inch of her. Any time you see one injury, check every inch of the bird for punctures for (as you see) they hide very easily. Flies however can find them by smell and blow them to lay their eggs. So it's protocol for poultry/waterfowl injuries to always over-check.

We're all cheering for you and Hazel!

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WOUND CARE FOR POULTRY – by Nathalie Ross
(updated August 19, 2009)

Unfortunately, poultry and waterfowl fall prey to predators often as they are a vulnerable species. It’s not always possible for us to take our birds to a vet; sometimes we are forced to deal with the injuries immediately. Indeed, wounds should always be dealt with immediately to lessen the chances of infection. For those times when no vet is available, I’ve written this article. I hope that you find it helpful when help is needed.

This is my usual way of handling wound care in both poultry and waterfowl. It is a combination of personal experience, veterinary assisted care, veterinary advice, and research. I’ve used it successfully on some pretty extensive wounds, including wounds that were of large areas and no skin. Poultry and waterfowl are quite resilient and I feel it’s important to give the bird a fighting chance if they survived an attack.
Some wounds are more extensive than others. Sometimes wound care requires neither all of these steps nor all of the materials. I will leave it to the reader to determine how far to take the treatment. However, I do wish to say that the most important part of wound treatment would be the initial examination for wounds, and the cleansing. This makes the rest of the process much easier and more effective.

First, gather materials as needed:
VetWrap or similar self-adhesive wrap.
gauze wrapping type bandages or squares (depending on what you have to bandage)
non-stick pads (depending on what you have to wrap)
antibiotic ointment (neosporin, Swat for horses if you have flies around)
hydrogen peroxide (h202)
iodine
warm water
a needleless syringe - preferably a big one like 30 cc's, or baby’s ear syringe
suture material if you need it (this ideally should be left to a vet)
a small pair of scissors like cuticle scissors are helpful
large scissors
(duct tape in some cases)
a good safe blood clotting agent. I prefer Clotisol as it's not poisonous and clots IMMEDIATELY even in high blood situations. You can even use it inside of beaks. It's water based, lasts ages for a small bottle. Seriously - ages. You can pretty much only get it online, but it's a must-have for a cabinet. Once you use it, you won't go back.
q-tips
paper towels
clothes that can be stained

DECIDING WHETHER OR NOT TO TREAT BY YOUR SELF:
First, an important note: It would be ideal if, as poultry owners faced with an injured bird, that the bird be taken to a qualified veterinarian who can not only dress the wounds, access the damage, but also prescribe the correct antibiotics and follow up as necessary. This, first and foremost, is what I recommend for any wound situation that is more than minor. Please take that to heart.

If instead you decide to treat the wound yourself, here are some basic instructions on how to do so. Note that every wound, every case, is different. Use your common sense and imagination on determining when this protocol must be flexed to fit your situation.

PREPARATION:
First, examine the bird and find all wounds. Literally check every inch of the bird’s body as bird down hides puncture wounds VERY well. Where you find a wound, use your big and little scissors to trim feathers away from the area. Try to only take as many as could touch the wound, no more - they need feather protection and the feathers won't grow back until next molt. Also be careful, if wing feathers are near, not to cut the living flesh part inside feather quills.

If the wounds are under the wing, sometimes you can simply wrap the wing in a t-shirt to keep whatever touches the wing clean. Baby t-shirts would be great for this. Neck part at the top of the wing, fitted with a little duct tape on the cloth (not tight please) and just tie the other end of the t-shirt.

Make sure to look very carefully against the skin for puncture wounds. There might not be look, and puncture wounds are tricky and hard to find. Note the location and severity of all wounds.

CLEANSING:
In this step, the best advice I can give is “clean it like you mean it”! When you clean, do so as if you’ll only get one chance and you want it to last for the entirety of the bird’s convalescence. If you do a really good thorough job, it might just last that long! It should be - barring other factors (like bite germs).
Take your syringe or a baby’s ear syringe and fill with hydrogen peroxide (H202) slightly diluted with water. Use the syringe to vigorously clean the wound area including in the wounds. (Do not use H202 on skinned-type wounds or slick places where skin is off – skip to the iodine step.) You only use h202 the first time as it tends to burn tissues and keep them from healing if you continue. It’s great for bubbling out bits of dirt from inside the wound and “burning” (oxidizing) germs. Do this cleansing about three times per wound. At this step, putting the bird on top of paper towels or regular towels that you can ruin makes things easier – the H202 doesn’t run everywhere or make the bird too wet.

Follow up by rinsing out the H202 with a water/iodine mixture made to be just the color of slightly strong iced tea. You want it warm. Fill your same syringe that you used with the H202 and flush the wounds rather vigorously. I like to think of it as trying to hit someone with the jet of the cleansing solution if the person is standing 4 feet away from me.
Alternately, you can use a solution of Nolvasan cleanser and water – 1 part Nolvasan to 6 parts water.
At this time, if there are any pieces of flesh that need to be removed, remove them. This is where I use a q-tip dipped in a bottle-cap full of Clotisol (so you don't contaminate the original bottle).
Doing this on a table that's ok to stain is best. I've done this on my truck's tail gate as I can clean it afterwards. Place a lot of paper towels under the birds for these two cleansing phases to keep the drain-off from going everywhere.
Use another clean paper towel to dry the wound. You want to leave some iodine solution inside the wound - it doesn't have to be skin-dry. Just dry enough for some ointment to stick.
DRESSING:
Once the wound is well cleaned, then you'll want to dress it. I use Neosporin and q-tips most often for this job. If there are flies in the area at all, I will use Neosporin inside the wounds (ointment) and use Swat wound ointment for horses instead. (It has fly repellent that's safe for poultry in it.) I fill punctures with neosporin. If they're deep, I stick the top of the tube into the wound (and throw away the tube after I'm done with everything). Pack it. You usually want air in a wound, but puncture wounds can sometimes heal on top first and leave a pocket inside. The antibiotic ointment (not creme) is a little insurance against too much bacteria and thus abcesses.
If the wound is one that absolutely must be stitched, then pack it with the antibiotic ointment. If you're using a fly-proof ointment, wipe the wound and then use the fly-proof on top. Otherwise just wipe slightly so there's a little antibiotic ointment on the important top part of the wound. You don't want to stray too far from just the wound, keep the bird dry.
On closing wounds with sutures: puncture wounds shouldn't be sutured. Bad bacteria love a place where there's no oxygen. Suturing closes the wound and encourages festering within. As much air as you can get to a wound, the better, except that the interior of punctures should have some antibacterial action going on.
I've had some serious wounds in my flock before. The only time I've sutured was when a very large flap of skin was torn from the front of a neck (read as 3 inches by 10 inch flap). Another recent case involves a possible rather large hole in a crop which, should it leak food, should be sutured. Otherwise try to leave things open. Poultry can re-grow an amazing amount of skin back if there's muscle underneath. New skin will granulate and grow in to fill in gaps that would surprise you.
On the areas that are just uncovered, I usually use antibiotic creme (versus ointment) because it's water based. Sometimes I'll just put a thin smear of antibiotic ointment, however, if that's what I have. Or fly-preventative ointment if there are flies in the area.

KNOW THE SMELL OF CLEANLY DRESSED WOUNDS:
Because part of your job in the next few days will be trying to detect any signs of infection, it’s important that you know the smell of a freshly cleaned and dressed wounds. Wounds, because they are exposed interiors of the body, do not smell “lovely” by nature. They have a distinct smell that some might find unpleasant. However, they’re much less unpleasant than a wound that has become infected or is going necrotic. Thus it is necessary to become familiar with the “good” smell so that you can recognize the bad. Smell the wound now, remember it, and use that memory every time you examine the healing wounds. Your nose will be as impotant a tool as your eyes in keeping the healing on track.

DRESSING WITH BANDAGES:
If at all possible, try not to cover with bandages. The average bandage keeps air out and moisture in and not in a good way. If you must bandage (a dirt floor area, extreme fly issues, etc) then try to keep the bandage to a minimum and very airy. That's why I'm not a big fan of nonstick bandages. They tend to trap moisture and cause a very warm airless area. But sometimes you have to use them. If so, cover the wound with the bandage. Wrap twice with very gauzey gauze wrap. Then put one layer only of VetWrap over. If you must secure (to keep the bandage from falling, for example) you can use very thin strips of duct tape like you would tape a birthday present. Using as little as possible, but a very strong tape like duct tape, helps let the air in.
Sometimes I've even used just one layer of a very clean paper towel rather than use a non-stick. Afterwards, if you have to remove it, you can soak with warm water and pick the bits out if it sticks. Gauze tends to embed in wound seepage.
Think out of the box when it comes to covering areas that are wounded. With my geese who had multiple puncture and surface wounds on their chest, and a high fly area, I used one white sheet that I formed into a sort of front-bib and tied behind their back. T-shirts are also awesome to cover a bird's body. Buy the appropriate size, slip the neck over their neck, their legs through the arm holes, cut two holes through which you slip their wings. Gather the bottom end (cut so that you don't cover their vent) at the top of their back and duct-tape the cloth to make it stay fitted. T-shirts are very airy, cheap, washable, and absorbent.

SUTURES:
If your bird requires stitches, suture material with thread attached can be found at many feedstores or purchased online ahead of time. The size you want is for dogs and cats. Sutures aren't stitched like a pillow case, but each stitch is its own knot. The semi-circular needles of suture needles are ideal for going into and out of the skin. Note: stitching is not easy - skin is tough, usually the needle is slippery, and it's rather tough to do. Overestimate the amount of suture material you need as you'll make knots and cut off the excess bit sticking up.
It’s best to try to avoid stitching a wound if it’s from an animal bite. The mouths of carnivorous animals contain bacteria that are harmful to birds. If you must stitch, always use a drain at the bottom to allow the wound to drain, and leave a stitch open at the top (preferably with a tube into it) so that you can flush out the wound with a syringe as needed.

MAINTENANCE:
Many wounds, if properly cleaned and dressed and left airy, do not need much maintenance. Oddly, one of the best ways of telling whether or not a wound is doing well is by using your nose. Smell the wound at the time of cleaning. Wounds have a particular almost sweet but not cloyingly sweet smell. Remember the smell. Then smell the wound daily to see if you smell rot. If you do, there's not enough air to the wound and possible infection going on.
Wounds will seep a little - that's natural and the body's way of dealing with wounds. Usually the seepage will be mostly clear and smell of wound. However, if there's any opaqueness to it, or clotted texture, that's infection. Also there will be some natural inflammation as the body tries to bully off the bad bacteria and bring in healing materials to the wound. However excessive inflammation, discoloration (especially black or green), should be noted.
If a wound needs cleaning or examining, take off what bandages you can gently. If they stick to the seepage from the wound, use warm water to soak the bandage parts remaining away from the drainage.
Then examine the wound, determine what needs to be done, and redress from the iodine stage onward.

ANTIBIOTICS:
Many wounds do not require additional antibiotics other than topical (on the skin) antibiotic dressings. However in the case of animal bites that weren't caught immediately, cat bites, and wounds that have been sitting or are particularly deep, it may be a good idea to treat with antibiotics. (For cat wounds, you *must* include penicillin as one of the antibiotics and from day one with any catbite wound – even if your veterinarian prescribes Baytril.) If you make this decision, please be sure to get one that is appropriate for wounds. The packages at the feedstore are not and will only cause more problems if used for a purpose for which they’re not intended.
Penicillin G Procaine (Aqueous Pen-G) is commonly found at many feedstores in their fridge section. It's awesome to keep in your own fridge for a rainy day. It's a very thick antibiotic and requires a thicker gauge needle. I would use no thinner than a 22 gauge, preferably something more thick at a length of .75 to 1 inch. At many feedstores, you can buy 3 cc syringes that are together already with needles. These are nice to have on hand as well as that 30 cc syringe that you'll use to flush wounds.
Instructions on how to give an injection are available separately as well as how to treat with antibiotics. If you do choose to use injectable antibiotics, be prepared to go the entire recommended course. Penicillin G Procaine is a concentrated penicillin (they're not all created equally) and only is required to be given every other day. Based on the type of antibiotic you expect to use, buy that many syringes plus two.

HEALING:
Birds in healing mode need help being stabilized, nourished, and hydrated. We all know how delicate birds can be, but it's surprising how resilient they can be at times. However, wounds will often depress a bird or cause them to go into shock. A stressed or shocked bird may not be able to digest foods they're commonly given. For that reason, I recommend only giving easily dissolved feeds when a bird is in the first stages of recovery. Think crumbles, pellets, etc. You don't want to make a drastic change in their diet ever, much less when they're already stressed. If a bird is reluctant to eat, try wetting the pellets/crumbles. You can also add a boiled egg yolk (one per six cups of food) mashed into the crumbles. I like to also give probiotics (yogurt, Fastrack, Probiocs, acidophilus, or whatever I have available) during this time to combat a secondary intestinal disorder from stress and change of way of eating. Yogurt is simple. You can mix 1 tablespoon per two cups of feed.
The added protein in an egg yolk helps the bird to heal. Adding a capsule of vitamin E to that mash (one per 2 cups of mash) also helps healing. If the birds are stressy, or not able to eat normally, I'll use a vitamin/electrolyte mix in their water for the first few days. I never ever use an oral antibiotic for wound treatment. Period.

CONCLUSION:
It's unfortunately common that poultry are victims of predation and wounds. They are delicate and, with their ultra-fast metabolisms, can die readily if they decide to. Remember that an injured bird can often have internal injuries we never see. If you lose them, just remember you tried your best. However you might be surprised, with proper wound-care, how many of these birds recover to absolutely normal lives. Just be patient as healing takes a while. Usually separate the birds, but if they can be near their peers they take heart from it and will do better.

Good luck with your flock, and I hope this information has been helpful.
Nathalie Ross
(Please do not reproduce without permission of the author. The author is not a veterinarian and does not intend to dispense information that at all should replace the advice of a qualified avian vet.)

USING PENICILLIN G PROCAINE FOR POULTRY – by Nathalie Ross
Sometimes when faced with injured chickens or waterfowls we feel it is necessary to treat with antibiotics to either stop an infection, or prevent one from happening.
People often turn to their local feed store for packaged antibiotics, believing that they are appropriate for nearly all occasions. Unfortunately, these antibiotics in the water actually aren't the ones that work for infected 'wounds'. They are intended for respiratory illnesses and enteritis. The antibiotics that are appropriate for wounds are of the penicillin range, or penicillin related medicines. (Penicillin, Penicillin G Procaine, amoxicillin, etc). With the exception of amoxicillin, these drugs are most often (and most effectively) given by injection. This is particularly true of the penicillin drugs as they are very rough on the beneficial flora of the bird’s digestive tract if given orally.
Penicillin injection medicines are readily available at most feed stores; they are kept and stored in the refrigerator and should be at home as well. One of my preferred drugs for wound use, and commonly found in most stores, is Penicillin G Procaine (300,000 IU).
Penicillin is a mixture of drug particles (solids) in liquid (solution). The particles in the solution are quite large, the drug is quite thick (particularly when stored correctly in the refrigerator) so you need a larger needle to get the correct mixture of particles in solution for an injection.
Most feed stores carry 3 cc syringes pre-equipped with screw-on needles that are 25 gauge (smaller). Of course, to keep the syringe sterile, leave the needle on. The same feedstores often carry loose 18 gauge sterile needles. Buy one for each syringe. Just before you plan to pull the penicillin from the vial for the shot, remove the syringe from its packaging and unscrew the smaller needle, screw on the larger needle with its cap still on. Make sure it is screwed tightly.
Pulling the medicine: penicillin particles settle during storage. Shake the penicillin vial until the solids on the bottom are all mixed into the liquid. Uncap the syringe, and pull the plunger out 1/4cc. Push the needle into the rubber top of the vial and press the plunger to let the air into the vial. Then pull your dosage. Pull out the syringe, turn the needle up, and thump with your finger to dislodge any air bubbles from the syringe to the top of the syringe. Push the plunger gently to push out the air. Re-cap the needle; letting that syringe just come to nearly room temperature. Replace the vial into the refrigerator as soon as the injection is ‘pulled’.

Penicillin is given in the muscle (“IM” aka intramuscularly). On poultry/waterfowl, the best place to give the shot is either in the breast meat or in the thigh. I prefer in the breast meat as there is a great deal of meat, little bone, and few blood vessels.
Clean a spot far from the bone, in the middle of one half of the breast, with a tiny bit of alcohol on a bit of tissue. Uncap the syringe and put the needle into the skin – not terribly far. Less than ¼ inch for sure. Pull its plunger first and look for blood. This is to make sure the needle is not in a blood vessel. If you see blood, withdraw the needle and move the injection sight. Repeat. If you don't see blood, push the plunger in and then remove the syringe from the bird.

Pen G procaine is given daily for no more than four days. The dosage for poultry or waterfowl (under 10 pounds) is listed as less than 1/4 cc if the Penicillin G Procaine is 300,000 I.U. (which is most often is) for animals from 1-10 kg (each kg = 2 pounds, so 1-20 pounds). The dosage is actually listed as 1ml (cc) per 100 pounds of body weight, but giving 1/10th of a cc would be troublesome and it has a high safety margin.
 
Wow that last post above me is so thorough... Thanks for posting it... I hope this thread stands till the end of time... I am sure most of us will have a chance to peruse it later. (hope not) Thanks so much for taking the time to type all the detailed instructions... I am saving this so I can refer to it later... KUDOS
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I'm with you geebs, that last post was GREAT! Thank you threehorses!

So I have been smelling her a few times a day, and yes I think it is healing. When I found her with the maggots, the smell was pretty bad, but now it just smells a little weird, but not infected or rotting. And I thought about her having other wounds, so I checked her out very thoroughly! Lesson learned, I definitely messed up when she returned from being out overnight and I didn't look her over as thoroughly as I should have.
The two wounds are pretty much in her breast meat. I have been using an antibiotic ointment called Equr...it actually has honey in it...so I guess that will help the situation.
There is some dark skin around the wounds...is this dead flesh or is it scabbing over? How do I tell?
I have a very good colloidal silver which I have been using on the wound and giving it to her internally. Is it absolutely necessary to give penicillin?
Hazel has been a champ, letting me hold her up-side-down to take care of her wounds...she's a great chicken. With all of your help I hope to be able to save her. She's one of my first chickens, probably a RIR. Don't know for sure because my friend gave me these 3 red hens when I first got chickens...but she's most likely a RIR.
Again...thanks for the great advice!

Hazel is very perky today, and fighting a little when I apply meds to her wounds...she's feeling stronger. In addition to the Equr, I am applying an all natural insect repellent called Beelzebug oil. These products are designed for horses but are very safe for all animals, big and small alike. More info on these products on my website. I have been using them on my chickens for a few years now and I always have great results. Equr is designed to kill the bacteria involved in Mud Fever in horses. I am using this instead of neosporin.
 
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Dark skin is probably bruising. (For an example, see this post: https://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/viewtopic.php?id=211237&p=4 - pictures at the last, day 2 - only darker). If it smells weird but not bad, it's probably just the weird wound smell. I wish I could find a good description for a good wound honestly.

Also you can (with a gloved hand) feel the tissue. If it's cold, then it's probably dead. If it's warm/hot then it's bruised. If it's hot and seeping and rotten, then it's necrotic. Colloidal silver topically will probably do great., If she's not doing badly now, penicillin probably won't be bad. I'd be careful using colloidal silver interally though because it kills bacteria, and the digestive tract needs good bacteria. Colloidal silver doesn't differentiate unfortunately. I'd stick with topical and nothing oral particularly because now she just smells like exposed flesh, not rot or infection or maggots (worst smell ever).

And I'm pretty sure at this point she's going to be fine. Honestly the only birds I've lost to wounds I lost on the first or second day. Day one to shock/internal injuries, day 2 to internal injuries and just lack of will to live (2 geese, very very bad injuries from a pitbull mauling). If she at all gets lethargic, do pen. Otherwise just watch her.

And don't worry about lessons learned - just be glad you learned. Now YOU can say with all certainty, like I do, for people to check every inch of the birds. You can be part of saving birds - and that's wonderful! Sometimes it takes a bad experience like this for us to learn so that we can help others. (How do you think I wrote that article lol - it was not at all theory or reading others' cases.) Lemonade from lemons.
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Geebs: geebs don't worry - I spam that thing constantly so hopefully others can find the info, unlike how I could not when I needed it ages ago - even as recently as this year with my big goose attack.

Thanks again to both of you for the good words on the article. I hope it's useful to a number of people.
 
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Yesterday evening I was inspecting her wounds, and the smaller wound that is more like a puncture wound still had about 4-5 maggots. I flushed them a few times with a little H2O2, let it work for a minute, and then flushed with saline.
I also tried to squeeze the area to express them...I ended up getting a horse needle and picking them out of there, they are nasty little critters. I hope I got them all this time.
She seemed a little stressed after that, but she's still here this morning and eating and drinking. I've had her in the house but I think I will put her crate out with the chickens today so she can be in the company of her friends. I think that is good advice, so I will take it!
Thanks for the extensive explanation, threehorses, of bruising and dead skin. I can try and get a picture of her today and send it later so that you can see what I am talking about. I don't think she is out of the woods yet, but she is definitely a tough cookie. (It's not oozing and I don't think it is necrotic.)
Thanks for your support!

Hazel is out in the barn with SweetPea the Silkie (sweetest little hen ever!) and Hazel started with the normal chicken noises when she saw her friends. The others are in a pen so they can't mess with her. The wounds looked and smelled pretty good today (well, they are healing anyway) no horrible smells and no maggots...yeah! She appeared pretty alert.

Update: Hazel is hanging outside picking at grass and looking stronger. It's cool and overcast, and the flies are not bad today so I will let her hang out like a normal chicken today, she looks very happy to be out there. Hoping that is a good sign that she is recuperating. Will send pics later, as I need some advice about the possible dead skin.
I brought some SWAT home from the barn...will someone assure me that this is safe for chickens?? It says on the label only use on horses, ponies, and dogs. How much should I apply...should I pack the wound with it, or apply after the antibacterial ointment? Thanks!
 
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Maggots will stagger hatch, too - especially if the first hatched in the warm, and then she was brought into cool. Temperatures effect hatch times. So keep just taking them out. And the horse needle idea- great one. Yeah one night I had to sit out under a red heat lamp (to make it less gross) and pick them off of a bird I found with a pair of tweezers. (The hen was being attacked by a dog down the road - I thought it was mine even though I've had a big fence around my place - it nearly killed her).

She was probably stressed from the feeling of the maggots, and all the handling. You know how they are.

A picture of the wound would be wonderful, thanks if you can get it. It's a shame we don't have smell-and-feel-a-vision online, too! (I may be the only person in the planet who wants to smell and feel a wound, huh?)

Not-oozing = good news.

And yes - swat can be used on chickens. Personally I like to pack punctures with neosporin ointment, and then put a dab of swat smoothed on top as I feel neosporin's antibiotics are more effective. (And then they melt into the wound and also suffocate anything that hatches in there).

Thanks for the good news and updates, and we look forward to more!
 
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A picture of the wound would be wonderful, thanks if you can get it. It's a shame we don't have smell-and-feel-a-vision online, too! (I may be the only person in the planet who wants to smell and feel a wound, huh?)

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funny..but trust me on that, the smell is not bad at all, I have been sticking my nose as close as I can and there's not a strong smell. But you wanted a photo, so here it is, don't be mad if it grosses you out!

After this photo I used a Q-tip and smothered the whole area with triple antibiotic oint. and she was really good about it. I didn't see a single maggot.
I didn't use the SWAT, but I think I will tomorrow because she wants to be with the flock and she seemed to get stronger throughout the day. She also got out of her dog crate and hopped up on her roost with her favorite sister.

Tell me what you think of that wound...it's pretty ugly, but she is very perky, and it definitely looks better than yesterday.

Here she is hanging out with her gals...she's the RIR
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I think the wound mostly looks good and dried over. It's in the exact spot where I'd expect a wound from clinging droppings or sores from loose droppings for a while. But it all looks clean and her vent doesn't seem to have much sticking to it from what I can see - some but not tons, just a couple of bits.

If she's walking about and still good, I'd say she has a very good chance of full recovery. I'd just watch to make sure the other hens don't peck at it as it's different, and of course watch for maggots. You can put some baby powder or corn starch on it after doing the neosporin to help reduce fly-attraction to it but then again that might interest her buddies.

Thank you for the picture. I had to joke with my friends "tell me why again I ask to have pictures of chicken wounds sent to me?" but all in all I'm always very glad to have something to see just in case something in particular shows up in the photograph that is of note.

Looks pretty good! I think I'd just let it dry up, neosporin maybe every other day, and see how she does.
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Okay, that sounds encouraging. Just to clarify, her vent is not in the picture...it is just above that huge wound and it looks totally fine. She's never had crusty butt or any poop sticking to her. She was out overnight after the hawk attack last week and I am thinking either the hawk tried to get her (there were a few red feathers right where I found my dead roo, like he saved her as she was being attacked), or she poked herself on something when she went running into the woods.
I am leaning towards the hawk, because it almost looks like he grabbed her with his talons, and left those two holes.
So far no one is pecking at her, but I can keep all but the silkie hen away, the silkie would never peck at anyone!
Thanks so much for your help through this...much appreciated! (sorry I had to gross everyone out with the photo!)
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Yeah I was curious about her vent, but there's enough underneath it (where the problems usually occur from clinging droppings) to be able to generally guess the condition of the vent. I figured if it were worse than the sore, you'd have photographed it instead.

And I'm glad to be of help. We're supposed to help each other, right?
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I'm glad the hawk didn't get her but poor rooster.
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