Hello everyone,
This is me and my husbands first flock of chickens and I think we have started off on a very wrong foot. We got several chicks from various breeders around the same time and did not keep them separate, which I now realize was a mistake. About 2 weeks later a few (3 of 10) started showing respiratory illness symptoms. I took one to the vet and the vet just gave her some antibiotics and did not do any testing. I put antibiotics in the water, and finally moved them out of the brooder and into their new coop a few weeks after that. All the respiratory symptoms were gone.
We had a very underweight 11-12 week old chick die recently and we sent her for a necropsy at the state lab and I'd like some help understanding the necropsy and whether or not I should use these findings to treat the rest of the flock for anything. Obviously the resp. issues were mycoplasma s., so I am mostly confused about the e. coli. Is this something the rest of the flock has and I need to treat? The rest seem healthy, active and they are eating and drinking. The poor thing I sent in for the necropsy had all sorts of issues. She was weak on one side and had lice. One of the tests came back for coccidiosis, but i treated the flock twice in the water with Corid prior to her death. Is it safe to assume her water intake was reduced and she didn't get the full dose? Also what is "mixed flora"?
The absolute worst part is that I have several surprise roosters and now I don't know what to do with them. I was planning on giving them to other people but with m.s. in the flock that wouldn't be good. I am not allowed to keep them and one just started crowing this morning. I am so bummed that we may have to cull chickens we raised. This was certainly not the "plan" when we started. Has anyone had luck giving roosters to people and disclosing M.S.and is it possible the roosters don't have it, and is there a particular test I could ask the vet to do to check (would it even be worth).
My apologies for the bad formatting below.
Diagnosis
Septicemia
Coccidiosis, enteric
Mycoplasma synoviae positive
Diagnosis Comment
This young bird had multiple organs infected with E. coli bacteria, and had coccidia in the fecal flotation. PCR testing was
positive for Mycoplasma synoviae but negative for Avian influenza.
Lab Findings
Bacteriology
Specimen Test Name Organism Drug MIC Interpretation
Meyer - Avian - Galliform / poultry - Chicken - 2 Months
Escherichia coli -1
Antibiotic Susceptibility - 9/9/2019 10:34 AM Escherichia coli
Amoxicillin 4 Susceptible
Ceftiofur 0.5 No Interpretation
Clindamycin >4 Resistant
Enrofloxacin <=0.12 No Interpretation
Erythromycin >4 No Interpretation
Florfenicol 4 Intermediate
Neomycin <= 2 Susceptible
Novobiocin >4 Resistant
Oxytetracycline >8 Resistant
Penicillin >8 Resistant
Spectinomycin 64 Resistant
Streptomycin 32 Resistant
Sulphadimethoxine >256 Resistant
Sulphathiazole >256 Resistant
Tetracycline >8 Resistant
Trimethoprim/
Sulfamethoxazole <= 0.5 Susceptible
Tylosin (Tartrate/ Base) >20 No
Interpretation
Specimen Test Name Organism Growth Amount
Meyer - Avian - Galliform / poultry - Chicken - 2 Months
Trachea - Tissue, fresh - 1 Bacterial Unknown ID (Aerobic Culture) - 9/9/2019 10:34 AM Mixed Flora Heavy
Yolk Sac - Tissue, fresh - 2 Bacterial Unknown ID (Aerobic Culture) - 9/6/2019 10:50 AM Escherichia coli Heavy
Spleen - Tissue, fresh - 3 Bacterial Unknown ID (Aerobic Culture) - 9/6/2019 10:50 AM Escherichia coli Heavy
Specimen Test Name Result
Avian - Galliform / poultry - Chicken - 2 Months
Intestine - Tissue, fresh - 4 Salmonella (Culture) - 9/9/2019 10:34 AM Not detected
Antibiotic
Susceptibility
In vitro susceptibility test results may not correspond with in vivo conditions.
Veterinary-specific interpretive criteria may be unavailable for some antibiotics listed. Not all drugs listed
are approved for use in food-producing animals and may not be species specific. Consult with your
veterinarian concerning dosage and withdrawal times. The laboratory assumes no responsibility for
efficacy, safety or residue avoidance in the use of these antibiotics.
The in vitro susceptibility of microorganisms to antibiotics is established by the Clinical Laboratory
Standards Institute (CLSI). In some cases, the microorganism-antibiotic combination has not yet been
validated by CLSI, and the result is reported as No Interpretation (NI). This does not mean that the
microorganism is not susceptible to the antibiotic; the antibiotic may still be useful for treatment by
considering pharmacokinetics, toxicity and host factors.
Molecular Testing
Specimen Test Name Type A Matrix H7 Primers H5 Primers
Meyer - Avian - Galliform / poultry - Chicken - 2 Months
Trachea - Swab - 7 Avian Influenza (AI) (PCR) - 9/6/2019 3:13 PM Negative 0.00 No Test 0.00 No Test 0.00
Specimen Test Name MS RRT-PCR
- Avian - Galliform / poultry - Chicken - 2 Months
Trachea - Swab - 7 Mycoplasma (MS RRT-PCR) - 9/6/2019 3:13 PM Positive
Specimen Test Name MG RRT-PCR
- Avian - Galliform / poultry - Chicken - 2 Months
Trachea - Swab - 7 Mycoplasma - 9/6/2019 3:13 PM Negative
Parasitology
Specimen Test Name Parasite Parasite Amount
Meyer - Avian - Galliform / poultry - Chicken - 2 Months
Intestine - Feces - 5 Parasite Unknown ID (Fecal Floatation Sugar) - 9/5/2019 3:03
PM
No Parasites Detected -Sample collected by client
Intestine - Feces - 6 Parasite Unknown ID (Fecal Floatation Sugar) - 9/5/2019 3:03PM
Coccidia Moderate parasite load -Collected during necropsy
Thanks for your help! This has been emotionally exhausting
This is me and my husbands first flock of chickens and I think we have started off on a very wrong foot. We got several chicks from various breeders around the same time and did not keep them separate, which I now realize was a mistake. About 2 weeks later a few (3 of 10) started showing respiratory illness symptoms. I took one to the vet and the vet just gave her some antibiotics and did not do any testing. I put antibiotics in the water, and finally moved them out of the brooder and into their new coop a few weeks after that. All the respiratory symptoms were gone.
We had a very underweight 11-12 week old chick die recently and we sent her for a necropsy at the state lab and I'd like some help understanding the necropsy and whether or not I should use these findings to treat the rest of the flock for anything. Obviously the resp. issues were mycoplasma s., so I am mostly confused about the e. coli. Is this something the rest of the flock has and I need to treat? The rest seem healthy, active and they are eating and drinking. The poor thing I sent in for the necropsy had all sorts of issues. She was weak on one side and had lice. One of the tests came back for coccidiosis, but i treated the flock twice in the water with Corid prior to her death. Is it safe to assume her water intake was reduced and she didn't get the full dose? Also what is "mixed flora"?
The absolute worst part is that I have several surprise roosters and now I don't know what to do with them. I was planning on giving them to other people but with m.s. in the flock that wouldn't be good. I am not allowed to keep them and one just started crowing this morning. I am so bummed that we may have to cull chickens we raised. This was certainly not the "plan" when we started. Has anyone had luck giving roosters to people and disclosing M.S.and is it possible the roosters don't have it, and is there a particular test I could ask the vet to do to check (would it even be worth).
My apologies for the bad formatting below.
Diagnosis
Septicemia
Coccidiosis, enteric
Mycoplasma synoviae positive
Diagnosis Comment
This young bird had multiple organs infected with E. coli bacteria, and had coccidia in the fecal flotation. PCR testing was
positive for Mycoplasma synoviae but negative for Avian influenza.
Lab Findings
Bacteriology
Specimen Test Name Organism Drug MIC Interpretation
Meyer - Avian - Galliform / poultry - Chicken - 2 Months
Escherichia coli -1
Antibiotic Susceptibility - 9/9/2019 10:34 AM Escherichia coli
Amoxicillin 4 Susceptible
Ceftiofur 0.5 No Interpretation
Clindamycin >4 Resistant
Enrofloxacin <=0.12 No Interpretation
Erythromycin >4 No Interpretation
Florfenicol 4 Intermediate
Neomycin <= 2 Susceptible
Novobiocin >4 Resistant
Oxytetracycline >8 Resistant
Penicillin >8 Resistant
Spectinomycin 64 Resistant
Streptomycin 32 Resistant
Sulphadimethoxine >256 Resistant
Sulphathiazole >256 Resistant
Tetracycline >8 Resistant
Trimethoprim/
Sulfamethoxazole <= 0.5 Susceptible
Tylosin (Tartrate/ Base) >20 No
Interpretation
Specimen Test Name Organism Growth Amount
Meyer - Avian - Galliform / poultry - Chicken - 2 Months
Trachea - Tissue, fresh - 1 Bacterial Unknown ID (Aerobic Culture) - 9/9/2019 10:34 AM Mixed Flora Heavy
Yolk Sac - Tissue, fresh - 2 Bacterial Unknown ID (Aerobic Culture) - 9/6/2019 10:50 AM Escherichia coli Heavy
Spleen - Tissue, fresh - 3 Bacterial Unknown ID (Aerobic Culture) - 9/6/2019 10:50 AM Escherichia coli Heavy
Specimen Test Name Result
Avian - Galliform / poultry - Chicken - 2 Months
Intestine - Tissue, fresh - 4 Salmonella (Culture) - 9/9/2019 10:34 AM Not detected
Antibiotic
Susceptibility
In vitro susceptibility test results may not correspond with in vivo conditions.
Veterinary-specific interpretive criteria may be unavailable for some antibiotics listed. Not all drugs listed
are approved for use in food-producing animals and may not be species specific. Consult with your
veterinarian concerning dosage and withdrawal times. The laboratory assumes no responsibility for
efficacy, safety or residue avoidance in the use of these antibiotics.
The in vitro susceptibility of microorganisms to antibiotics is established by the Clinical Laboratory
Standards Institute (CLSI). In some cases, the microorganism-antibiotic combination has not yet been
validated by CLSI, and the result is reported as No Interpretation (NI). This does not mean that the
microorganism is not susceptible to the antibiotic; the antibiotic may still be useful for treatment by
considering pharmacokinetics, toxicity and host factors.
Molecular Testing
Specimen Test Name Type A Matrix H7 Primers H5 Primers
Meyer - Avian - Galliform / poultry - Chicken - 2 Months
Trachea - Swab - 7 Avian Influenza (AI) (PCR) - 9/6/2019 3:13 PM Negative 0.00 No Test 0.00 No Test 0.00
Specimen Test Name MS RRT-PCR
- Avian - Galliform / poultry - Chicken - 2 Months
Trachea - Swab - 7 Mycoplasma (MS RRT-PCR) - 9/6/2019 3:13 PM Positive
Specimen Test Name MG RRT-PCR
- Avian - Galliform / poultry - Chicken - 2 Months
Trachea - Swab - 7 Mycoplasma - 9/6/2019 3:13 PM Negative
Parasitology
Specimen Test Name Parasite Parasite Amount
Meyer - Avian - Galliform / poultry - Chicken - 2 Months
Intestine - Feces - 5 Parasite Unknown ID (Fecal Floatation Sugar) - 9/5/2019 3:03
PM
No Parasites Detected -Sample collected by client
Intestine - Feces - 6 Parasite Unknown ID (Fecal Floatation Sugar) - 9/5/2019 3:03PM
Coccidia Moderate parasite load -Collected during necropsy
Thanks for your help! This has been emotionally exhausting
