Is this coccidiosis? Picture attached.

undergroundchickens

Songster
9 Years
Apr 13, 2010
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Utah
I have some new chicks in quarantine and was wondering if this means they have coccidiosis? They act healthy other than several poops looking like this. If it is I have read Corid is the best to treat with? Can you purchase Corid locally or can you only get it from a vet? Also what is the dosage. The chicks have a small quart size waterer. Thanks.

54147_poop.jpg
 
If they are otherwise healthy, that looks to be harmless intestinal lining. They shed it in their poo. If it was Cocci I would suspect it after they were acting very sick. Lethargic, fluffed up, not really eating, non-social...and the bloody stools come in the advanced stages of the cocci so you would definetly notice that your chickens were sick.
 
http://chat.allotment.org.uk/index.php?topic=17568.0

Here's
the "poo page." You can compare normal to abnl. poo.
Doesn't look like cocci poo to me. But then it is just a picture and you are there- you can see it better. Check the poo page. I saw actual liquid blood in cocci poo when my flock had it.

Oh- also coccidiosis can be present without bloody poo. But they have intestinal pain and so you would notice something was wrong.
 
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No, one silkie died the day after I started treatment. She would stand there all puffed up, lethargic, and wouldn't eat or drink.

Also- I did force some water into her, but she was just in a downhill fast situation- that's the way coccidiosis is.
 
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No, one silkie died the day after I started treatment. She would stand there all puffed up, lethargic, and wouldn't eat or drink.

Also- I did force some water into her, but she was just in a downhill fast situation- that's the way coccidiosis is.

thanks. i lost two birds from cocci two weeks ago and now i have two more sick... i used sulfasol the first time and i have corid coming in the mail tomorrow.​
 
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No, one silkie died the day after I started treatment. She would stand there all puffed up, lethargic, and wouldn't eat or drink.

Also- I did force some water into her, but she was just in a downhill fast situation- that's the way coccidiosis is.

Last year I had a poultry judge ask me the best treatment for coccidiosis and her answer was that u should get it far away from your flock and bury it in a few garbage bags so your flock doesnt get it. So as far as I know it is untreatable
 
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Quote:
No, one silkie died the day after I started treatment. She would stand there all puffed up, lethargic, and wouldn't eat or drink.

Also- I did force some water into her, but she was just in a downhill fast situation- that's the way coccidiosis is.

Last year I had a poultry judge ask me the best treatment for coccidiosis and her answer was that u should get it far away from your flock and bury it in a few garbage bags so your flock doesnt get it. So as far as I know it is untreatable

There were quite a few members of my flock with bloody poo- that went away after starting the Corid within 24 hours and they all survived fine. It is famous for being a "swift and deadly" disease though (I'm quoting ChooksChick I think).
 
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Medicated chick starter is NOT a treatment for coccidiosis; in fact, it doesn't always even prevent it. It is designed to lessen the cocci load a little. Cocci are in the soil everywhere. So it is a matter of keeping their little immune systems healthy. Even an older hen can succumb to it with a depressed immune system.

If one in the flock is shedding it in the poo in vast quantities, though, it is VERY contagious.
 

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