moderndreamr
In the Brooder
- Jun 10, 2016
- 19
- 6
- 27
Hi everyone! I've been doing a lot of research both in the forums here and elsewhere, and I am really not sure what to make of my pullet's symptoms. She's a 6 month old Easter Egger, started laying 6 weeks ago (give or take...I'm still working to see who lays which eggs...), and other than a pretty swollen abdomen and a very slight wheeziness, doesn't seem to have a thing wrong with her. She is eating, drinking, pooping, laying, and acting normally, comb is a nice color with no purple or blue tips. I brought her inside Monday evening and have been monitoring her food and water intake, giving her vitamins and Nutri-drench, and she got a nice long epsom salt bath tonight to try and help her relax. I also put a couple drops of VetRx on the surface of her water to help her breathing.
I was originally thinking egg yolk peritonitis, but she hasn't laid any soft-shelled eggs that I know of (eggs are collected daily and I haven't seen any soft-shelled, shell-less, or even misshapen eggs), so I think I can rule that out. Her abdomen feels like she's got a small water balloon stuck in it, but I can still feel the muscles move on the sides of her belly and there's no feather loss, noticeably extra heat, or stretched out skin. There also aren't any hard masses or anything solid that I can feel. Her wheezing is almost imperceptible, but definitely present. I'm keeping close tabs on her.
None of the other birds are showing any signs of illness or bloating, so I guess it could be ascites or sterile peritonitis? Does anyone have any better (or more clear) idea of what it could be and what I need to do to at least keep her comfortable? I understand both ascites and peritonitis are almost always fatal
I was originally thinking egg yolk peritonitis, but she hasn't laid any soft-shelled eggs that I know of (eggs are collected daily and I haven't seen any soft-shelled, shell-less, or even misshapen eggs), so I think I can rule that out. Her abdomen feels like she's got a small water balloon stuck in it, but I can still feel the muscles move on the sides of her belly and there's no feather loss, noticeably extra heat, or stretched out skin. There also aren't any hard masses or anything solid that I can feel. Her wheezing is almost imperceptible, but definitely present. I'm keeping close tabs on her.
None of the other birds are showing any signs of illness or bloating, so I guess it could be ascites or sterile peritonitis? Does anyone have any better (or more clear) idea of what it could be and what I need to do to at least keep her comfortable? I understand both ascites and peritonitis are almost always fatal
