- Sep 13, 2017
- 63
- 93
- 121
we recently had our tiny serama chick die
we were raising her and a silkie chick as house pets, and we took her to the local avian vet. He diagnosed possible mycoplasma and gave us antibiotics, but all the stress (she'd recently been moved and recovered from coccidiosis) apparently made her susceptible to a fungal respiratory infection, which the vet said was likely a major cause of death (her necropsy showed pus in lungs and air sacks).
Our silkie is doing well, VERY active and growing. She has been on antibiotics (vet prescribed, oral) for 2.5 weeks now. Unfortunately, she's developed a runny nose despite this, and I've seen her gaping (that weird yawning behavior) a couple times a day. She had swollen eyes, but these vanished after 5 days on the antibiotic. Since she's so young and tiny, the vet can't do all the tests necessary to determine exactly what she has. He's offered to hospitalize her, but she's so very very attached to us that we're worried being alone and in a strange environment would do more harm than good.
She hangs out on a sheet on the bed all day, and jumps happily into my boyfriends lap for snuggles while he's at his computer. She adores him, and becomes concerned when he leaves the room without her. She'd love to ride on one of our shoulders everywhere we go, like a parrot. She's the family dog, I swear. We are terrified of losing her. Our vet is hopeful that she will recover on her own, but he's told us stress is a huge factor in her health right now, and since she's so attached, my instinct is to keep her with her 'flock', especially since my boyfriend is home most of the day, and his younger brother is in love with her as well and hangs out with her whenever we are both out of the house. She's rarely unattended while the sun is up.
Has anyone helped a chick/chicken recover from mycoplasma or fungal respiratory infections before? What can we do to aid her immune system and ease her symptoms? Or, should we hospitalize her after all?

Our silkie is doing well, VERY active and growing. She has been on antibiotics (vet prescribed, oral) for 2.5 weeks now. Unfortunately, she's developed a runny nose despite this, and I've seen her gaping (that weird yawning behavior) a couple times a day. She had swollen eyes, but these vanished after 5 days on the antibiotic. Since she's so young and tiny, the vet can't do all the tests necessary to determine exactly what she has. He's offered to hospitalize her, but she's so very very attached to us that we're worried being alone and in a strange environment would do more harm than good.
She hangs out on a sheet on the bed all day, and jumps happily into my boyfriends lap for snuggles while he's at his computer. She adores him, and becomes concerned when he leaves the room without her. She'd love to ride on one of our shoulders everywhere we go, like a parrot. She's the family dog, I swear. We are terrified of losing her. Our vet is hopeful that she will recover on her own, but he's told us stress is a huge factor in her health right now, and since she's so attached, my instinct is to keep her with her 'flock', especially since my boyfriend is home most of the day, and his younger brother is in love with her as well and hangs out with her whenever we are both out of the house. She's rarely unattended while the sun is up.
Has anyone helped a chick/chicken recover from mycoplasma or fungal respiratory infections before? What can we do to aid her immune system and ease her symptoms? Or, should we hospitalize her after all?