I have a hen called Brownie who was completely normal a week ago. One morning she started bouncing around being silly in the cool breeze; she went out of eyesight for a brief moment and then came back to me mostly dragging one leg - the change was quite sudden. At first she couldn’t put weight on her right leg without pain, then a couple days later her right leg seemed limp and cold. Now she is getting limited movement back in it and it’s warm again, but still obviously painful. For the first five days she ate/drank well, but yesterday she suddenly quit eating which is worrisome to me. She is still drinking plenty. Nothing feels obviously displaced or broken but there could be a fracture hidden somewhere.
Up until today I assumed it must be a hip fracture because the right back side of her ilium was very painful to the touch. However, I am wondering if this could actually all be fallout from a more cryptic reproductive issue instead, like internal laying late stages of ovarian cancer. Can those conditions produce similar symptoms to hip or upper leg fractures?
Brownie is 1.5 years old and is finishing up a molt, so she has not been laying eggs at all for a few weeks. The reason I ask about the possibility of things like ovarian cancer is that she has a history of egg/reproductive issues. I’ve had to give her emergency extra calcium citrate and crate care for egg binding 3 times already. Her eggs gradually got more strangely shaped and textured over time and she periodically lays soft shelled eggs regardless of how much calcium she gets. I also had to treat her for vent gleet this summer. I think some things are just not quite right with her reproductive system; I just don’t know whether that could be part of the cause of this most recent problem or not.
I have her in a 24x24 wire rabbit-type enclosure that I modified to let me access it from the top easily so I can clean around her easily. I haven’t done a sling because she hates being restrained and will thrash violently if she can’t sit exactly how she wants. She will be far more likely to stay still if I let her sprawl in deep shavings like she is currently than if I try to suspend her with dangling legs.
I do not have an avian/poultry/exotics vet within reasonable range. The few vets that are within range will not see poultry or do any testing for them; they are mammal-only. As a result, things like x-rays and prescription medications are not options for me.
Up until today I assumed it must be a hip fracture because the right back side of her ilium was very painful to the touch. However, I am wondering if this could actually all be fallout from a more cryptic reproductive issue instead, like internal laying late stages of ovarian cancer. Can those conditions produce similar symptoms to hip or upper leg fractures?
Brownie is 1.5 years old and is finishing up a molt, so she has not been laying eggs at all for a few weeks. The reason I ask about the possibility of things like ovarian cancer is that she has a history of egg/reproductive issues. I’ve had to give her emergency extra calcium citrate and crate care for egg binding 3 times already. Her eggs gradually got more strangely shaped and textured over time and she periodically lays soft shelled eggs regardless of how much calcium she gets. I also had to treat her for vent gleet this summer. I think some things are just not quite right with her reproductive system; I just don’t know whether that could be part of the cause of this most recent problem or not.
I have her in a 24x24 wire rabbit-type enclosure that I modified to let me access it from the top easily so I can clean around her easily. I haven’t done a sling because she hates being restrained and will thrash violently if she can’t sit exactly how she wants. She will be far more likely to stay still if I let her sprawl in deep shavings like she is currently than if I try to suspend her with dangling legs.
I do not have an avian/poultry/exotics vet within reasonable range. The few vets that are within range will not see poultry or do any testing for them; they are mammal-only. As a result, things like x-rays and prescription medications are not options for me.