- Jun 9, 2009
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Bumblefoot will not cause sickness. It comes from roosting above hard ground and the individual hitting the hard ground coming off the roost. The foot becomes bruised and then develops bumblefoot. Prevalent in cooped heavy breeds,also overweight older fowl. I have raised American Games for 40 years and never had bumblefoot on free range of fowl in pens where the ground is soft. I have treated bumblefoot by cutting out the corn, soaking the foot in kerosene, and wrapping it in a cloth. It is a time consuming ailment to produce a cure, but it works. It appears your fowl caught a infection and needs antibiotics immeadiately. Good luck, but the chances are not good.
I don't think this is right. I believe bumblefoot is an abscess, which occurs after the bird gets a cut on the foot, and the cut becomes infected. At first the abscess is soft and full of pus, but eventually a hard kernel can form within it. While still soft, it can sometimes be cleared by soaking alone, but if a hardened kernel has formed, it must be excised, to fully clear the infection. As with any other type of abscess, there is the chance that bacteria can get out of the abscess and into the blood stream, resulting in a systemic infection, and, if untreated, death.