Scabs? Help!

pitter58

In the Brooder
6 Years
Sep 22, 2013
16
0
24
What is up with the comb on this one? Is it a disease? Or scab?
400
 
Its difficult to tell by the photo, but to me, it looks like either a more severe pecking wound, or dry fowl pox. Fowl Pox is a viral disease carried by insects like mosquitoes. It has no relation at all to human chicken pox. In its wet form, fowl pox shows up as scabs/bumps on a bird's head, wattles, and comb. In its other form, the wet form, fowl pox appears as lesions/bumps in the mouth and respiratory tract. If the lumps inside the throat get large enough, death is caused by suffocation. But the dry form of fowl pox is usually nothing to worry about--it will run its course in 3-6 weeks. The only thing you can really do is treat with an antibiotic to prevent secondary infection, and try to keep the affected birds comfortable.
 
Its difficult to tell by the photo, but to me, it looks like either a more severe pecking wound, or dry fowl pox. Fowl Pox is a viral disease carried by insects like mosquitoes. It has no relation at all to human chicken pox. In its wet form, fowl pox shows up as scabs/bumps on a bird's head, wattles, and comb. In its other form, the wet form, fowl pox appears as lesions/bumps in the mouth and respiratory tract. If the lumps inside the throat get large enough, death is caused by suffocation. But the dry form of fowl pox is usually nothing to worry about--it will run its course in 3-6 weeks. The only thing you can really do is treat with an antibiotic to prevent secondary infection, and try to keep the affected birds comfortable.
X2. To help the scabs/lesions go away, you can put some iodine or shoe polish on them.
 
To know for sure would I need to take her to the vet? Is it highly contagious?
 

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