Milky Diarrhea

KateW

Hatching
Apr 21, 2015
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I have a Red Star with white milky diarrhea - she is the only one in my flock that is sick. It has been over a month. She seems fine otherwise - eats and drinks well, perky, gregarious, active. I googled pictures of chicken poop and the one that looks like hers ("What's the Scoop on Chicken Poop?" said "severe case of egg yolk peritonitis" which doesn't seem accurate). I wash her behind regularly to clean her up but I am wondering if I should try an antibiotic.
If it were worms, would I see "evidence" in her poop. and wouldn't the others have worms too and also have diarrhea..?
 
I'd like to re-open this thread, since our 2 year old PBR has been having the same white milky diarrhea (mostly in morning) for over 6 weeks now.

It started exactly on the first day of her molt. We thought she was just adapting to the molt. When it didn't get better after 2 weeks, we gave the entire flock Corid for 5 days at the treatment dose. No visible improvement.

About 2 weeks later, we gave Valbazen at 0.5cc orally to the whole flock, as well as pro-biotics in their mash and electrolytes in their water (on and off). I noticed little rice-like bits in her poop after a few days (pic below). Could be a sign of worms, but could also have been undigested seeds. Her poop started to get more solid 5 days after Valbazen, but then got wet again. Ricey bits went away. 10 days after the first dose, we gave another dose of valbazen. That was 4 days ago.

Her night time poops are brown and have gotten less splotchy (pic below), but still semi-solid. Every morning she lets out a big dose of white milky diarrhea (pic below). Throughout the day, her poops are very wet, sometimes brownish, sometimes whitish. Also, her eyes have been quite droopy, like she's just tired of this, but no discharge from eyes, nose or ears. No coughing or wheezing either. Comb is pale. She lost a lot of weight, but seems to be gaining some of it back slowly. She eats and drinks a lot, and seems to have enough energy to run around with the others. She recently started losing feathers again, but not nearly as many as the first time 6 weeks ago.

Any suggestions would be very much appreciated!

This morning (Feb 12, 2020)
IMG_20200212_075316.jpg

Last night (Feb 11, 2020)
IMG_20200210_073045.jpg

Ricey bits (Jan 31, 2020):
IMG_20200130_081807.jpg
 
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The vet did a fecal float just to be sure there was nothing funky. Nothing irregular.

We're considering giving Ruth oxytetracycline injections, in case it's Salmonella, but it's a shot in the dark. Should we hold off? Any other treatments we can try? She's had really bad diarrhea for 7 weeks now. I don't know how much longer she will last. I'm also worried that postponing treatment can cause irreparable damage.

Thanks for your help.
 
Here's the follow-up on Ruth's situation. We detected clostridium in a gram stain, so gave her 0.2 ml oxytetracycline (0.1 ml/kg) shots once per day, since that's the only anti-biotics we have access to. The condition did not improve. Normally, we'd do a culture to find out what anti-biotics the bacteria are sensitive to, but I haven't learned how to do that yet and it takes about a week to get the results anyways. We took her to the vet, since there was not much else we could do. He prescribed 200 mg amoxicillin twice a day and the bacteria and milky poo cleared up after a few days! The vet didn't even bother with the culture, like it was a no-brainer. We later found out that we could get amoxicillin over the counter at the aquarium store under the brand Fish Mox at a fraction of the price than what the vet charges. These come in 250 mg capsules, which can be diluted in water and divided into the correct dosage, administered with a syringe. Ruth is all better now, after 2 months of milky poo.
 
Here's the follow-up on Ruth's situation. We detected clostridium in a gram stain, so gave her 0.2 ml oxytetracycline (0.1 ml/kg) shots once per day, since that's the only anti-biotics we have access to. The condition did not improve. Normally, we'd do a culture to find out what anti-biotics the bacteria are sensitive to, but I haven't learned how to do that yet and it takes about a week to get the results anyways. We took her to the vet, since there was not much else we could do. He prescribed 200 mg amoxicillin twice a day and the bacteria and milky poo cleared up after a few days! The vet didn't even bother with the culture, like it was a no-brainer. We later found out that we could get amoxicillin over the counter at the aquarium store under the brand Fish Mox at a fraction of the price than what the vet charges. These come in 250 mg capsules, which can be diluted in water and divided into the correct dosage, administered with a syringe. Ruth is all better now, after 2 months of milky poo.
Thank you for sharing this update, I’m glad to hear Ruth is well! I currently have a hen with very similar poops to what you posted. Did Ruth ever yawn during this? My 7 year old hen Clea is also yawning periodically. The combination of the milky white poops and yawning worries me.
 

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