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Never thought about that, though I don't recall ever hearing about chickens catching West Nile, but they do get fowl pox from mosquitoes, of course, which is also only from bites, not spread from bird to bird, thankfully. Might explain him seemingly on the upswing after three months and some of the matching symptoms. Oddly enough, I did not have an issue with moquitoes last summer into fall so it never would have occurred to me. I found this on an extension service web page:I wonder if he had a bad but non-lethal case of West Nile virus.
West Nile Encephalitis and Poultry
https://extension.psu.edu/west-nile-encephalitis-and-poultryMosquitoes are the vector of the West Nile virus. Although chickens and turkeys can become infected when experimentally inoculated with the virus or bitten by infected mosquitoes, these birds do not develop the clinical disease. Their immune system quickly responds to infection by producing antibodies that clear the virus from their body. Also, because the virus can be transmitted only through the bite of an infected mosquito, infected poultry present no significant public health risk. Poultry can neither directly infect other birds, animals, or humans, nor act as a reservoir for the virus.
AND from the Merck manual West Nile Virus in Birds
Acute infections can be diagnosed by suggestive neurological clinical signs (eg, ataxia, weakness, hind limb paresis, head tilt, tremors, torticollis, seizures) or histological examination combined with virus isolation, RT-PCR assay, or immunohistochemical testing. Some patients may recover with supportive care, such as fluid administration and assisted feeding; however, prognosis generally is poor in cases of severe neurological disease.
So, those symptoms definitely fit, thank you, Mary. Now, I know something new. Supportive care must be what I do best, LOL. I did it with Bash in 2019. If Bodie's comb begins to stand again and his crow returns, I'll be more confident that he'll survive.
Would be crazy if our chickens ended up with the same thing at about the same time, completely on opposite sides of the country.Strange coincidence maybe, but one of my bantams is showing similar symptoms. I noticed her acting odd last week. Now she walks like she's drunk, and appears to be molting. She still eats well and can still get away so we are letting her go for now. I've taken to calling her roly poly. She's like a little tumble weed with spunk.
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