I feel guilty just writing this but a visit to my lovely vet Gloria here costs on average 20 Euros and if I hadn't had enough money to cover a particular treatment she has accepted one of the lamps I make.
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Thank you.I'm so sorry to see Mrs Lee is such a state. That must be heart breaking for you. Sadly, the most likely diagnosis is Marek's, especially when you have a history of it in your flock. It may be that this bird has been carrying the disease in it's dormant phase for months or even years. It may be that she has had a minor outbreak before and you have not noticed it. The vaccine will not prevent them from getting it but should prevent the more serious tumours. It can exhibit as something as minimal as being unable to keep one eyelid fully open and sometimes recover within a day or two when the disease goes into remission, only to resurface when the bird's system is low. Moulting or bad weather/shorter days/confinement etc are often triggers in older birds as well as the usual trigger of adolescent males running amok in the flock (not sure if any of those apply other than moult) and secondary outbreaks are usually more severe and prolonged than initial ones if they survive.
The best that I can suggest is to keep her well fed. I would give her a warm wet mash made with chick crumb rather than layer feed because it has higher protein and less calcium and she is unlikely to be laying at this time so she doesn't need the extra calcium. I would also mix some scrambled egg into it and the Nutri Drench. Make her as comfortable as you can and keep your fingers crossed. If this is Marek's she will actively be shedding the virus whilst she is symptomatic, so take precautions not to transfer infected material to your other birds. I have not had one as incapacitated as that recover from an outbreak but that doesn't mean it can't happen. I would guess the main risk is that she will aspirate due to being unable to keep her head and body in the correct position.
I wish you luck with her and will be keeping my fingers crossed.
Don’t feel bad, thank you for replying.I feel guilty just writing this but a visit to my lovely vet Gloria here costs on average 20 Euros and if I hadn't had enough money to cover a particular treatment she has accepted one of the lamps I make.
Thank you.
Yes, it’s certainly possible that this is mereks, however is it odd that she shows no sign of what we had before? Meaning the typical split legged?
Also I have never had them go done this fast before.
Hmmm...
That is amazingI feel guilty just writing this but a visit to my lovely vet Gloria here costs on average 20 Euros and if I hadn't had enough money to cover a particular treatment she has accepted one of the lamps I make.
She's lovely and she thinks I'm mad. I am the only person now who takes chickens to her.I'm so sorry to hear about your lovely hen doing so badly
That is amazingI'm guessing ours won't be like that! I'll have to ask my friend who has sheep what he charges!
No, I have not seen those videos. I will have to look for them.My loving thoughts are with you and Mrs. Lee. In the last video, so wondered if she was thirsty or hungry with what she was doing with her beak. Have you seen the wry neck videos where they steady the chixken’s head by grasping the neck feathers so she can eat?