BACKGROUND/CONTEXT: Had 15 chicks shipped out a week ago; they got to my PO 23 hours after ship time. Someone else collected them for me and placed them in the brooder with a heat plate and water. No one was injured or lethargic. Later that day I looked them over and everyone looked healthy, so I offered wet mash, and the next day switched to dry.
Since then I've had a day where I had to wash dried fecal matter off of half of them; checked again the following day and everything was fine. Yesterday I glanced at a few butts and they seemed clean enough, only a couple had tiny bits of dried poop sticking to the ends of their fluff. Nothing I haven't seen before!
PROBLEM: This morning I discovered that one had a severe, bloody prolapsed cloaca. She's crying very loudly. I rinsed her off, and used petroleum jelly on a q-tip to try to push it back in, but every time she cries or strains it pops back out. I've isolated her in a separate brooder, with a low-temp heat pad and some water. Since then when I've handled her she's passed some petroleum-jelly-urate-mix. I put a few drops of water inside the front of her beak, trying to get her to rehydrate just a little.
WHAT IM WORKING WITH: On hand I have petroleum jelly, Epsom salts, some cooking oils (not coconut), various hemmeroid products, triple antibiotic ointment without painkillers, save-a-chick electrolytes, distilled water, nutri-drench, rubbing alcohol, and q-tips & pipettes. I probably forgot some human medicines we have, but most things not on that list would have to wait 24 hours until I can make a trip to a grocery store or feed store/big box store.
This is my 4th or 5th time round with baby chicks. The only other prolapses I've seen have been more minor, in younger birds, and resolved quickly without major intervention.
What can I do to a) improve her chances of surviving and b) reduce her discomfort in the meantime?
Since then I've had a day where I had to wash dried fecal matter off of half of them; checked again the following day and everything was fine. Yesterday I glanced at a few butts and they seemed clean enough, only a couple had tiny bits of dried poop sticking to the ends of their fluff. Nothing I haven't seen before!
PROBLEM: This morning I discovered that one had a severe, bloody prolapsed cloaca. She's crying very loudly. I rinsed her off, and used petroleum jelly on a q-tip to try to push it back in, but every time she cries or strains it pops back out. I've isolated her in a separate brooder, with a low-temp heat pad and some water. Since then when I've handled her she's passed some petroleum-jelly-urate-mix. I put a few drops of water inside the front of her beak, trying to get her to rehydrate just a little.
WHAT IM WORKING WITH: On hand I have petroleum jelly, Epsom salts, some cooking oils (not coconut), various hemmeroid products, triple antibiotic ointment without painkillers, save-a-chick electrolytes, distilled water, nutri-drench, rubbing alcohol, and q-tips & pipettes. I probably forgot some human medicines we have, but most things not on that list would have to wait 24 hours until I can make a trip to a grocery store or feed store/big box store.
This is my 4th or 5th time round with baby chicks. The only other prolapses I've seen have been more minor, in younger birds, and resolved quickly without major intervention.
What can I do to a) improve her chances of surviving and b) reduce her discomfort in the meantime?
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