Limping does not necessarily equate to Mareks. There could be many causes, starting with an injury of some sort to her foot. Mareks does not usually onset with limping; leg or wing paralysis is a much more common symptom, although there can be other causes for those, too.so upset! so my ex best friend (no longer friends for varous reasons) wanted some show quality wyandotte bantams so i bought her a trio which is kept at my house cause she lives in town. they were isolated for about 3 weeks before i added them in a extra breeding pen i had in my silkie/showgirl shed, well a week ago i noticed one of the three limping and i seperated her. she hasnt gotten any worse or better but i decided to cull her tonight, im so worried she had mareks! non of the other birds have any signs of it so far but they were so close to my silkie flock which i have spent so much money on im worried this one bird is going to affect my 36 birds which non are vaccinated idk if thats good or bad cause now at least they will show signs and not be secret carriers!!!!
Virtually all chickens that are not in laboratory isolation conditions carry Mareks. From the Meck Veterinary Manual: "Marek's disease is one of the most ubiquitous avian infections; it is identified in chicken flocks worldwide. Every flock, except for those maintained under strict pathogen-free conditions, may be presumed to be infected. Although clinical disease is not always apparent in infected flocks, a subclinical decrease in growth rate and egg production may be economically important."
There are some strains of Mareks that are fairly virulent, but most are not, so chances are that even if the bird has/had Mareks, the rest of your flock will be fine..