Limiting day light for EYP

Go to Amazon or a pet store and purchase fish antibiotics. @casportpony recommends doxycycline in placement of tetracycline. She can give you dosages.

LofMc
Doxycyline instead of tetracycline or oxytetracycline, but for EYP I would use Baytril, which you can purchase without a prescription from numerous places. Google "baytril for birds" or "enfloxil".

Note that Baytril is banned for use in poultry, so people should research that before deciding to use it.
 
Note that Baytril is banned for use in poultry, so people should research that before deciding to use it.
I believe Baytril is banned in birds because of resistance to Campylobacter,
a pretty good reason IMO.
 
I believe Baytril is banned in birds because of resistance to Campylobacter,
a pretty good reason IMO.
It is a good reason, but it's also the only easily obtainable drug that will treat most of the bacteria that are usually involved with EYP and/or salpingitis. I know that the use of Baytril is a "hot topic", but it's often the only affordable way to save the life of our pet birds.
 
So if I get some tetracycline or doxycycline should I separate her while giving the medicated water or will be ok for all them? I'm thinking of separating her.
 
x2
To the OP: Only the sick bird should be medicated. If you chose to do the Doxycycline rather than the Baytril, dosage appears to be 20mg/kg for Doxycycline placed in water for 3 to 5 days. Obviously you take a risk whenever self-treating a pet since you could do the animal greater harm. Self treating should be a last resort.

And yes, normally I would say go through a vet, but the owner tried that....many vets simply don't want to mess with chickens, so we owners are often left to our own devices and knowledgeable friends on BYC (there's a whole forum for that here).

Much of vet science for chickens caters to industry/commercial practices with most results in culling the bird if it does not perform.

And yes, over use of antibiotics is a concern for all. Since this bird is obviously not for the food chain in either egg or meat, but a pet, that gives the owner a bit of latitude.


LofMc

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18671073
https://sites.google.com/a/poultrypedia.com/poultrypedia/medicine-chart
 

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