Prolapes and vent glee

Shaz1522

Songster
6 Years
Joined
Aug 3, 2019
Messages
79
Reaction score
21
Points
106
Good evening.
I have a 2 year old black rock with a prolapse and vent glee.
Which do I fix first
I have had a chicken with prolapse before and isolated her. Used anasol and then honey when that didn't work fully.and that worked
This one has both prolapse and vent glee.
I know to use thrush cream for vent glee and anasol for prolapse but how do I treat both surly I don't just keep using one cream then the other.
I'm feeding her no pellets only corn and yogout.unfortunslyvshes still laid the past 2 days.so I'm cutting down some of her light tomorrow so she doesn't lay.
Any advice how to treat both and in what order I do things
Thankyou
 
Are you talking about Anasol the electrolyte mix or Aquasol the fenbendazole dewormer?
Vent gleet you can use miconazole or other "thrush" creams to treat. To reduce the prolapse you might need a hydrocortisone to help reduce the swelling. It depends on what the main issue is.

Corn is very fattening - is that all she usually eats?

Cutting out light for a couple days might not be enough to prevent laying. You can try giving calcium with D3 to help her pass any eggs she might lay in the meantime.
Sometimes the prolapse is what causes the vent gleet due to poop getting blocked, potentially by a stuck egg... you said she's still laying so that's unlikely the case. Can you post pictures?

@Eggcessive @azygous
 
Are you talking about Anasol the electrolyte mix or Aquasol the fenbendazole dewormer?
Vent gleet you can use miconazole or other "thrush" creams to treat. To reduce the prolapse you might need a hydrocortisone to help reduce the swelling. It depends on what the main issue is.

Corn is very fattening - is that all she usually eats?

Cutting out light for a couple days might not be enough to prevent laying. You can try giving calcium with D3 to help her pass any eggs she might lay in the meantime.
Sometimes the prolapse is what causes the vent gleet due to poop getting blocked, potentially by a stuck egg... you said she's still laying so that's unlikely the case. Can you post pictures?

@Eggcessive @azygous
I'm trying to remember how to post pic
I have in y chicken first aid kit
Anusol ointment
Clotrimazole antifungal cream
Calcium
Honey
Wbson salts
I bathed her for 15 mins in the salts
And have been putting antifungal cream on to start with and then later honey
She sucks the lrolapes on herself when I rub them on.
I also gave her some calcium last night.Shes happy in herself just has the prolapes and the yellow glee.
I stated the anasol cream last night.
I just feel I'm putting to many things on her.
The thrush cream for the glee then the bum cream to shrink the prolapes
What order would you do it or would you just use 1
 
Are you talking about Anasol the electrolyte mix or Aquasol the fenbendazole dewormer?
Vent gleet you can use miconazole or other "thrush" creams to treat. To reduce the prolapse you might need a hydrocortisone to help reduce the swelling. It depends on what the main issue is.

Corn is very fattening - is that all she usually eats?

Cutting out light for a couple days might not be enough to prevent laying. You can try giving calcium with D3 to help her pass any eggs she might lay in the meantime.
Sometimes the prolapse is what causes the vent gleet due to poop getting blocked, potentially by a stuck egg... you said she's still laying so that's unlikely the case. Can you post pictures?

@Eggcessive @azygous
 
I would just do the antifungal cream for the moment as long as the prolapse stays moist. If you're layering 2 creams on top of each other they likely won't get through effectively.
If the cream wears off and absorbs then put the Anusol on for the second half of the day.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom