Pekin with swollen leg and can't walk.

Since it's a duck, letting it have time in lukewarm water deep enough to float in will take some pressure off the foot and soften the skin a little. You can use an Epsom salt compress on the foot (don't let the E.s. be eaten, it is a laxative). After a bath and compress, you can then drop a couple of drops of clear iodine - not brown, clear - in the center of the swollen spot. Then let it be for a few days. It should form a black scab. This may take up to 5 days or so. Soak the foot again, and the scab should loosen so you can pull the ugly stuff out. Here is what Haunted55 found [COLOR=333333]On July 1st, I found one of my Pekin ducks with what I would consider a bad case of Bumblefoot. Both feet were involved and I'm ashamed to say, the only way I found it was she was limping. One foot had 7 and the other had 3. I was able to grab her and bring her into the house and put her into a warm bath to clean and soak. Two water changes later and softened feet, all I had time to do was paint the bumbles with colorless iodine, grabbed the wrong stuff, and put her into a dog crate in my house until I could get everything ready to operate and get them gone. Did I mention the thought of this scared me half to death?[/COLOR] [COLOR=333333]Sad to say it took 6 days before i was able to get everything together and someone to help out with the 'cure'. The following pictures are what we found after the bath we gave before the planned surgery to remove these things.[/COLOR] [COLOR=333333] [/COLOR] [COLOR=333333] [/COLOR] [COLOR=333333] [/COLOR] [COLOR=333333] [/COLOR] [COLOR=333333] [/COLOR] [COLOR=333333]As can be seen, there really wasn't much to operate on, even though I was prepared to do just that. No matter how much squeezing or prodding or soaking, there just wasn't anything more to come out, it was all on the scabs that were covering the sores. The swelling was down from the 'marbles' I saw when I first found them. I poured betadine over the ones I had opened and painted the ones that I hadn't again with the iodine and put her back into her crate with clean bedding. [/COLOR] [COLOR=333333]the next pictures are of the same Pekin and anothe duck, Dottie the Mallard, who was also found limping.[/COLOR] [COLOR=333333] [/COLOR] [COLOR=333333] [/COLOR] [COLOR=333333] [/COLOR] [COLOR=333333]As can be seen in the first two pictures, the bumbles have been dramatically reduced on the Pekin with just the iodine application and the smaller ones totally gone. The last four pictures are of the Mallard who is still under going the iodine applications. [/COLOR] [COLOR=333333] [/COLOR] [COLOR=333333]As can be seen, this is how the left and right foot look tonight on the Pekin duck. The heels being the worst are still showing infection and need for more treatment. tomorrow, I will again give a bath and pull/cut out the scabbing and treat with straight iodine this time. These spots are now flat or as flat as they should be considering the part of the foot they are on. I will still touch up the places that had the spots before as well. [/COLOR]
Why this happens to their feet and what are the reasons of such injury ?
 
Well we ended up putting her down ourselves. After talking to the vet the chances of her recovering were not looking good. Sounds like she was healing then her fracture couldn't hold and just broke. I think she had poor genes.

It was hard to not think of her as a pet because I had spent so much time with her but I didn't want her to be in pain any longer. Completely broke my heart and I now know I'm not cut out for raising ducks for meat. Thank you so much for your ideas and support. I'm so happy I had this forum to fall back on.

hugs.gif
 
Bumblefoot, from what I have read and been told, is a staph infection (Staphylococcus aureus, usually). Their feet get cut or abraded (thorns, concrete, rough stones, sticks, and such), and the bacteria - and these bacteria are all over the place - get under the skin. Most of the time, healthy ducks can shake off such an infection.

But sometimes the bacteria get ahead of the duck's immune system. That leads to bumblefoot.
 

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