Thank you for the update. It was the sensible thing to do, as there really is no cure for this condition.We've decided to put her down as she's very weak and it's probably best for her that we end her suffering.

Will you have a necropsy done?
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Thank you for the update. It was the sensible thing to do, as there really is no cure for this condition.We've decided to put her down as she's very weak and it's probably best for her that we end her suffering.
I believe so too, it's better we let her go peacefully.Thank you for the update. It was the sensible thing to do, as there really is no cure for this condition.
Will you have a necropsy done?
sorry to hear that, I too have a hen with peritonitis, it got better at first but back again 4 months later. I had another who couldn't walk & gave her cat food broth, I was going to suggest calcium in the water tooUpdate on this one - we managed to treat her EYP successfully with the antibiotics but she's still paralysed. We thought it was vitamin deficiency so we tried everything in terms of vitamins, fortified drinks etc. but she's just getting weaker to the point that she's completely lost all balance. We've decided to put her down as she's very weak and it's probably best for her that we end her suffering.
Thanks guys for all your advice on here.
Sorry about your hen too, EYP is such an awful illness for them.sorry to hear that, I too have a hen with peritonitis, it got better at first but back again 4 months later. I had another who couldn't walk & gave her cat food broth, I was going to suggest calcium in the water too
That's okay! Yes keeping sick hens is hard work and especially rescues have weaker bodies due to the stress they've been under. Keeping rescues is so rewarding but at the same time very intense as they get sick easily. I've also got a small flock (3) and I've had 2 sick ones in the past couple of weeks - the one who had EYP and didn't make it, and I've got a non-rescue with sour crop at the moment.Thank you so much for replying, EYP sadly seems inevitable for my 7 year-old rescue hen (UK). Keeping poorly hens is a lonely job but I've tried all sorts of remedies and will gladly share if it helps just one hen - I only have 4 (a small garden) trying to use spare time on research - our UK vets are great but rescue hens are pretty worthless here, probably everywhere. *I syringed cat food broth or sardines (both illegal food here!) to several poorly rescues, they were in a box not moving - took about a week to recover - also trying iodine on my EYP hen, better than not trying![]()