- Aug 21, 2008
- 63
- 1
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Thanks in advance for reading this and for any advice offered up. I have a year old pullet (my only double-yolk layer) who came up lame a couple weeks ago. I palpated her leg from foot to hip and could not find any area of tenderness or deformity. I put her in a carrier and gave her vitamins in her water to see if she just tweaked it and needed some time to heal. After two days she was very ancy to get out. All other activities are normal for her but she won't put weight on the leg. I ran it by my goat vet when I was at the clinic and she mentioned bumble foot, something I'd never heard of. I had her contained again to try to let it heal so I pulled her out and checked out the underside of her foot. It seemed more tough and a little bigger than the other side and the top of her foot was black and not her normal grey. I assumed this was from dragging the foot. I could not find any black scab that I heard accompanies bumble foot. I did soak her in epsom salts though and poked around with a knife a little to see if I could find a point of entry for an infection. I didn't see anything that made me feel comfortable in slicing her foot open. So, now I'm sort of stuck.
In summary:
- No noticeable deformity or tenderness in leg
- top of foot is black, not grey (but she has been dragging that leg)
- She pecks at the top of her foot
- Pad of her foot seems tougher and bigger on the injured side
- Injured leg definitely has heat to it
- Otherwise moving around as best she can and eating and drinking normally
My plan is to continue with the epsom salt soaks, get her on electrolytes, truly keep her contained her her carrier and not let her out until this is resolved, spray a topical antibacterial on her that works against staph (GenOne) that my vet is prescribing for me. I called a dozen local stores looking for Tricide-Neo but no one carries it. I may order it just in case the GenOne does not do the trick. I have sulfa, oxytetracycline, tetracycline hydrochloride, terramycin. (I also have Quartermaster penicillin-dihydrostreptomycin for mastitis if that happens to be useful...)
Does this seem likely to be bumble foot?
If so, can they get it on the top of their foot? (as that seems to be where the scales are discolored)
Worth giving oral or injectable antibiotics in addition to the spray?
Here are pictures of her normal foot and the lame one. I sprayed blu-kote on it after her soak but you can still see where the foot is black under the spray.



In summary:
- No noticeable deformity or tenderness in leg
- top of foot is black, not grey (but she has been dragging that leg)
- She pecks at the top of her foot
- Pad of her foot seems tougher and bigger on the injured side
- Injured leg definitely has heat to it
- Otherwise moving around as best she can and eating and drinking normally
My plan is to continue with the epsom salt soaks, get her on electrolytes, truly keep her contained her her carrier and not let her out until this is resolved, spray a topical antibacterial on her that works against staph (GenOne) that my vet is prescribing for me. I called a dozen local stores looking for Tricide-Neo but no one carries it. I may order it just in case the GenOne does not do the trick. I have sulfa, oxytetracycline, tetracycline hydrochloride, terramycin. (I also have Quartermaster penicillin-dihydrostreptomycin for mastitis if that happens to be useful...)
Does this seem likely to be bumble foot?
If so, can they get it on the top of their foot? (as that seems to be where the scales are discolored)
Worth giving oral or injectable antibiotics in addition to the spray?
Here are pictures of her normal foot and the lame one. I sprayed blu-kote on it after her soak but you can still see where the foot is black under the spray.
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