Hen with Chronic Ascites After Lash Eggs

Update: Intermittent laying, swelling and deflating without needing a draining!

So early September Cleo started to lay eggs again, but only 2 in the span of 1-2 weeks. One egg was a huge double yolk. Then she just stopped.

September 20th, Cleo started to fill up again. I noticed she started feeling heavier and couple days she was panting a little bit. She also seemed a tad under the weather, but generally still fine - eager to run out into the yard to free range and dust bathe. I was trying to decide if I should drain her then or wait a bit longer for her to fill a little more. I opted to wait.

Then Hurricane Helene hit and we didn't have power for 6 days. During that time I was really stressed and wasn't paying much attention to her (or the others - just bare minimum care).

Anyway, a few days ago I noticed something odd - Cleo was lighter! All that fluid she was starting to build up was gone again. And she's doing great.

I'll update this post with pictures tomorrow! But I'm very glad she cleared up on her own. It's odd, though. The ascites seems to coincide with egg laying. Most of my hens are going into a molt and I wonder if she might be too and if that's related to her not filling/deflating.
 
Cleo Update

Sorry for forgetting the pictures last time.

I wanted to share that since my last post, Cleo would fill up a bit every so often and then the buildup would decrease. So she was doing super.

However, during April she filled up really bad. I let it go since it didn't seem to be bothering her (though apparently I didn't notice her eating less and less). I was hoping she would follow the same trend, but she didn't. It got so bad she had to stand with her legs far apart and would waddle when she walked. She was practically a walking water balloon. But her behavior was fine and normal.

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On May 3rd I poked her and let her drain on her own (as I do). I also preemptively gave her some aspirin. Pretty much all of the fluid came out over the next 24 hours. She slow dripped for that long!

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Comb as it started turning purple.
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I was shocked to see how thin she truly was: her breast bone is insanely prominent. She's likely emaciated. The draining made her more active, running and foraging like normal. Her behavior was good, but her appetite was next to none. She was very weak, enough to fall over with too much exertion. Her comb was already flopped over and not as plump as the laying girls, but it turned so purple and shriveled that I thought it'd fall off. I didn't get a picture since I was really stressed and worried.

It took a lot longer for her to recover. Her comb finally started losing the purple hue and turning pink around the 9th. I've been offering her everything I can to encourage her to eat. She'd eat tomato before her feed, so I'd give her that. A few blueberries. Finally yesterday she started eating her feed a bit again, so she's getting there. Her feet and wattles are no longer cold to the touch. All this to say, she definitely went into shock but is on the up. Here's hoping I don't need to drain her for a good 6+ months again.

P.S. I'm wondering if there's a way to stop her draining on her own after she's lost some of the fluid, just so she doesn't go into shock. Wound glue, perhaps? Will research this.
 
Update: I had to drain Cleo yet again. She started filling up within a week after the last draining. About 3-4 days ago she started standing legs apart again and waddling as she walked. 1-2 days ago she started losing her appetite. So it was time to drain her for sure.

Around 4:30 I popped her. Managed to get her still enough that the needle went in and stayed in and I was able to watch as straw colored fluid shot out the other end of the needle. I pulled it back out, as I do, and let her drip.

I noticed pretty quickly that the fluid staining the potty pad was blood-tinged. At first I thought maybe it was the excess betadine (I wet her rump down with water, then spray a lot of isopropyl alcohol on the skin and follow that with a liberal spray of betadine before and after pricking). But it didn't go away after 30 minutes of dripping. Cleo seemed unfazed. Just begging and dancing around to be let back out.

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Of course, I panicked. I'm really not cut out for this stuff, I've learned. But whatever I can do for her. She's proven time and again that she's determined to live so I'll do all I can until she gives up. Being a walking water balloon doesn't stop her from foraging to her heart's content, cooing at me, and trying to escape the house any time I bring her in. So I won't stop trying to help her.

Long story short, I saw that some of the fluid drops were straw colored and others were more bloody. Once I was able to restrain her again while she's flinging bloody bodily fluid all over me and the room, trying to perch on me/escape the house/peck random lint off the floor... I found that several feathers on her rump had scabs. And soon found the offending feather that was bleeding. Sorry the picture is blurry, she just wouldn't sit still for anything and my phone camera was non too pleased about that. Looking back at the picture, looks like maybe two feathers started bleeding.

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She stopped dripping pretty quick. Which kind of sucks but maybe she won't go into shock this time? She pooped a couple times after the fluid emptied from below her cloaca, so I'm glad to free up the pressure back there. But she still is heavily swollen right between her legs. I also feel a large lump. I'm suspicious she's laid a couple eggs (a fairy egg and a regular one). But I'm also super tired and maybe missed grabbing another hen's olive egg. Who knows. The point is, I've never pricked her further down. I've always done 2-3 inches below and to the right of the vent. Soooo... I'm hoping the other fluid moves back and I can drain off some more in a few days.

Fingers crossed. She's such a trooper. She's been dealing with this for over a year now and I'm so proud of her determination for life. She's already 3 years old (born the later half of May). She's such a sweetheart and always talks to me. One of my first 6 chickens ever, got as chickens June 6th of 2022. In 5 days it'll be her adoption anniversary. I hope she at least lasts until then so I can give her some special treat for the occasion. She was the one chick that had an interest in me and always roosted on my arm. She'd often sleep on my arm. She had these little black stripes on either side of her beak, the only one like that. So I called her Egypt for a bit before naming her Cleo.

Sorry for blathering so much. I had such a scare with the blood and have already lost two of my OG 6, so I'm feeling nostalgic, and grateful for her determination. And sad about her filling up so quickly this time. After the last draining, it took so long to get her to eat again. All she ate was tomatoes at first. Some blueberries. Then she lost interest in that. She got into my ferrets' turkey and devoured that, so I started giving her turkey every day until finally she started eating her feed again. She had no interest for treats anymore and just ate her feed. Only for us to be back at this again, with her losing her appetite. Although she did want some bread earlier so I let her have very small amount.

EDIT: Decided to rewrite the post with more info, pictures, and me blabbering on. TL;DR is, the blood was from a feather. She's fine. She didn't drain long nor did she drain much, so hopefully she wont' go into shock this time. But I'll likely try to drain her again in a few days.
 
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Good News & Bad News

Good news: The slight draining had no negative effect on her. And the fluid between her legs had room to move back so she was able to walk around more comfortably. To avoid having to stress her out with another draining, I began giving Cleo dandelion root tea again. I found a way to get her to drink some on her own: putting treats in it. She mainly wanted to eat turkey for some reason, so I've been marinating small bits of plain turkey in the dandelion tea for a few hours and she'll go bobbing for it. I was so excited to find that the tea was helping alleviate the fluid build-up. The swelling was tight originally but after a few days it was squishy. I thought maybe we finally got control of it!

Bad news: Cleo quit willingly consuming the tea. She's a fighter too, so I can't comfortably wrestle her to syringe it into her and tubing it every day would be super stressful. I'm not sure how much this thread is watched, so I'm going to post another and see what I can find out about dandelion pills I found. If I can just pop one in her mouth and go, that would be great. Anyway, she started swelling up fast again. She got so bad I had to drain her.

On June 24th (a few days ago) I drained her again. Usual procedure where I disinfect her skin and poke her with a needle, then let her drain on her own drop by drop. Cleo drained it all. It all came out. :he

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She spent 3 hours dripping before she mostly stopped. I think she lost over half her body weight in fluid. I had no way of stopping the drip, unsure how to even do so at that point. She ate really good and was in a pretty good mood. Aaaaaand the next day she feels awful. Of course she does. She is eating their regular feed, and a great amount too. But her feet, comb, wattles, are all cold. So cold that she doesn't seem the least bit fazed by the weather. Was 100F from the heat dome and everyone is panting except her. Probably felt good to her. And she went from roosting (yes, even has a huge water balloon, she insisted on roosting) to sleeping on the floor in the straw because she's weak.

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I know she needed draining, but I feel so bad when she feels so bad afterwards. Last time took almost a week for her to feel better. It's frustrating to think she felt better prior, but I know as long as she pulls through, she's got a lot of good days ahead. I just wish she didn't drain it all out. I'm going to see if I can dig up some more info. Some way I can make this better for her. She's on amoxicillin again. Will keep her on it for 7 days. When she gets super sick like this after a draining, I always worry it could be an infection. But honestly I assume it's just sickness from the huge volume of fluid leaving her in such a short time.
 
Sadly, I'm posting today to share that Cleo passed away July 6th. She did not recover from draining this time. She seemed like she might, but after a week she didn't bounce back. She grew more lethargic and her comb was terribly purple. She lost interest in food and spent most of her time resting. When she stopped eating entirely and couldn't stand, I jumped in and began manually feeding her. She improved in the first day and was less listless. By the second day, she could mostly stand and would stand to poop then lay back down. By the third day she perked up and started eating on her own. Her comb turned red again and she looked great. I thought it was going to be okay. But then next day, she didn't want to move and I had to manually feed her again and it took everything for her to poop. I knew I was losing her at that point. The following day she stopped having bowel movements and just lay there sleeping/resting. I made her comfortable. Gave her aspirin for any pain relief. I opted to stop force feeding her by the afternoon. I let her have some final sunshine, fresh air, gentle music, and her family around her. I put her in a crate so she could be with her family for the night that evening. She opened her eyes to look at them, then closed them again. She rarely opened her eyes. I was glad when she did. I told her I loved her, I was proud of her. I sang to her, told her goodnight and goodbye. In the morning, she was gone.

I'll update this more at a later time with proper details. It's been too hard for me to share this. I feel like I killed her. It hurts that I thought she was gonna make it when she started eating again on her own and was her same bright-eyed self again. She was determined to give it her all until the very end. I'm already crying just writing this. I know she likely wouldn't have made it for long even if I hadn't chosen to drain her (she was swollen so bad she could barely poop as it was) and I know that draining her was only to make her comfortable - that her health issue would take her one day. But I feel to blame, as though I shouldn't have interfered this final time and just let things be. Or maybe I should've bought some wound glue or something and figured out a way to stop her from draining everything out all at once. I've always let her just drip and could never control the amount her body would manage to expel. I feel she was happier prior to the draining and managing in her own way. I made a mistake this time. Or perhaps, this was a less painful way to pass. Who knows.

RIP Cleo ❤️

May 23rd approx, 2022 - July 6, 2025
 
Hi, I'm looking to see if there's anything I'm missing that I could be doing for my hen, Cleo.

She has been showing reproductive issues this past month, but I don't know if her symptoms are related. Would it hurt to deworm her again? Get another antibiotic? Though I fear her time is limited. Here's what's been going on:

Stopped laying due to stress: she was laying eggs normally (5-6 a week) until April 20th. On April 19th, Cleo's flockmate & head hen Zelda (who she was raised with as a chick) passed away suddenly in the doorway of the coop, about 6 or so inches from the nest. Cleo as well as 2 other hens (Moose & Stitch) all stopped laying and even avoided the coop.

Laying resumed but only 3 per week. They resumed laying April 27th, a week later. But the three have only laid about 3 eggs each per week.

Just dewormed with Valbazen May 1st then again May 11th. Dewormed the whole flock and also treated them all with Corid.

May 4th-5th lethargy that she quickly recovered from. Cleo started laying around a lot. She would barely forage while free ranging. She stopped every few minutes to lay where she was standing or would find a bush to lay under.
View attachment 3845135

Some TLC (electrolytes, resting indoors in the AC, calcium tablets) she perked back up. Figured it might've been the heat getting to her.

May 16th, passed lash material. I found her with her tail down. But she perked up quickly afterwards.
View attachment 3845137
View attachment 3845478View attachment 3845479

Still laying 3 eggs a week after passing lash material. I almost had my doubts it was her that passed the lash. So I waited.

May 23rd she passed what was essentially a soft shell egg, but basically just mucus coated in a thin eggshell membrane. No lash material.
View attachment 3845138

I started her on amoxicillin morning of May 24th. 250mg twice daily. I also gave her a calcium tablet every day for 3 days in a row. I skipped a day and gave her another tablet today.

She is still laying eggs! Laid one yesterday and another the day before.

She's been heavily panting. She started to perk back up a bit, but after taking her off the calcium tablets, she seems to be getting worse. It's probably just a coincidence and just her health declining. She's less interested in food, but gets excited for oats and watermelon. Until this morning.

This morning, it's 68F in here. She's panting heavily. Comb is flopping. She's dehydrated. She emptied her crop overnight (she was eating yesterday). Ate a little oats and a few bits of cheese, but not interested in food or water. I'm getting water into her beak every 10 minutes to try to keep her hydrated but I'm afraid unless I tube feed/water her, there's little else I can do. Her abdomen is also larger, I noted. Seems the past week it's been getting bigger. It's not very soft and squishy though. She might be internally laying. But my hen Peaches, who is definitely internally laying for two months now, isn't like this. I'm afraid Cleo may pass away today or tomorrow and I'm heartbroken. She's so talkative to me and still lively, bright eyes. I want to help her and do what I can. I thought about trying to drain her abdomen but I don't think I can get any needles today. Might be able to tomorrow. But honestly, I'm not sure if it would help seeing as this likely isn't ascites due to all the other symptoms she's been having.
View attachment 3845161

Any advice? It's probably just too late for her, I imagine. It hurts to think so and I don't want to give up on her. I'm probably going to put her back outside with everyone so she won't be alone.

Oh, before I forget, she's had an issue before. I think parasites might've been to blame. She immediately molted after being dewormed. https://www.backyardchickens.com/th...il-down-drinking-a-lot-refusing-food.1607565/ But to summarize, late December she got ill. Treating her with Corid and Safeguard seemed to be the fix but she was still off. Turns out, she was starting a molt.
Go on YouTube and check out Agribusiness Insider channel and what he recommends re what’s going on. He gives organic remedies. Make sure you don’t have red roost mites in your coop… often if they don’t want to roost it’s because they don’t want to be eaten alive at night. The mites can drain too much blood and kill your chickens if bad enough. Hoping your girl pulls through ❤️
 
Hi, I'm looking to see if there's anything I'm missing that I could be doing for my hen, Cleo.

She has been showing reproductive issues this past month, but I don't know if her symptoms are related. Would it hurt to deworm her again? Get another antibiotic? Though I fear her time is limited. Here's what's been going on:

Stopped laying due to stress: she was laying eggs normally (5-6 a week) until April 20th. On April 19th, Cleo's flockmate & head hen Zelda (who she was raised with as a chick) passed away suddenly in the doorway of the coop, about 6 or so inches from the nest. Cleo as well as 2 other hens (Moose & Stitch) all stopped laying and even avoided the coop.

Laying resumed but only 3 per week. They resumed laying April 27th, a week later. But the three have only laid about 3 eggs each per week.

Just dewormed with Valbazen May 1st then again May 11th. Dewormed the whole flock and also treated them all with Corid.

May 4th-5th lethargy that she quickly recovered from. Cleo started laying around a lot. She would barely forage while free ranging. She stopped every few minutes to lay where she was standing or would find a bush to lay under.
View attachment 3845135

Some TLC (electrolytes, resting indoors in the AC, calcium tablets) she perked back up. Figured it might've been the heat getting to her.

May 16th, passed lash material. I found her with her tail down. But she perked up quickly afterwards.
View attachment 3845137
View attachment 3845478View attachment 3845479

Still laying 3 eggs a week after passing lash material. I almost had my doubts it was her that passed the lash. So I waited.

May 23rd she passed what was essentially a soft shell egg, but basically just mucus coated in a thin eggshell membrane. No lash material.
View attachment 3845138

I started her on amoxicillin morning of May 24th. 250mg twice daily. I also gave her a calcium tablet every day for 3 days in a row. I skipped a day and gave her another tablet today.

She is still laying eggs! Laid one yesterday and another the day before.

She's been heavily panting. She started to perk back up a bit, but after taking her off the calcium tablets, she seems to be getting worse. It's probably just a coincidence and just her health declining. She's less interested in food, but gets excited for oats and watermelon. Until this morning.

This morning, it's 68F in here. She's panting heavily. Comb is flopping. She's dehydrated. She emptied her crop overnight (she was eating yesterday). Ate a little oats and a few bits of cheese, but not interested in food or water. I'm getting water into her beak every 10 minutes to try to keep her hydrated but I'm afraid unless I tube feed/water her, there's little else I can do. Her abdomen is also larger, I noted. Seems the past week it's been getting bigger. It's not very soft and squishy though. She might be internally laying. But my hen Peaches, who is definitely internally laying for two months now, isn't like this. I'm afraid Cleo may pass away today or tomorrow and I'm heartbroken. She's so talkative to me and still lively, bright eyes. I want to help her and do what I can. I thought about trying to drain her abdomen but I don't think I can get any needles today. Might be able to tomorrow. But honestly, I'm not sure if it would help seeing as this likely isn't ascites due to all the other symptoms she's been having.
View attachment 3845161

Any advice? It's probably just too late for her, I imagine. It hurts to think so and I don't want to give up on her. I'm probably going to put her back outside with everyone so she won't be alone.

Oh, before I forget, she's had an issue before. I think parasites might've been to blame. She immediately molted after being dewormed. https://www.backyardchickens.com/th...il-down-drinking-a-lot-refusing-food.1607565/ But to summarize, late December she got ill. Treating her with Corid and Safeguard seemed to be the fix but she was still off. Turns out, she was starting a molt.
Remember too.. ascites is often caused by feeding too many treats to our Chooks. Be careful how much her nutrition is thrown off when you give things other then her layer pellets❤️
Sometimes we treat our girls literally to death💔

 

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