Iv iwned turkeys with chickens for years with out any problems...guess im lucky.
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Iv iwned turkeys with chickens for years with out any problems...guess im lucky.
Those of you that have never had a turkey or poult die are very lucky. But let me ask *all* of you this... If you have had some die, how do you know that they did not have histomoniasis?Iv iwned turkeys with chickens for years with out any problems...guess im lucky.
casportpony wrote: You aren't supposed to eat their eggs either, but that hasn't stopped me. Just do the research and decide if it's something you're comfortable with.
Metronidazole, the drug used in the treatment of Trichomonas infections, was tested for carcinogenicity in a lifetime study in Swiss mice. The drug was administered orally at levels of either 0.5, 0.3, 0.15, or 0.06% of the powdered diet. At all dose levels the incidence of lung tumors, predominantly adenomas, was elevated. An increased incidence of malignant lymphomas was observed in the 2 highest dosage groups of female mice but not in the males.
An excess of cancer of the uterine cervix was found in two epidemiological studies of women treated with metronidazole for vaginal trichomoniasis (Beard et al. 1979, Friedman and Ury 1980, IARC 1982); however, trichomoniasis is a risk factor for cervical cancer, and one of the studies (Beard et al. 1979) showed a greater excess of cancer among women with trichomoniasis who were not exposed to metronidazole. Še study by Beard et al., but not that by Friedman et al., reported an excess of lung cancer, which may have been due to smoking. Since metronidazole was listed in the Fourth Annual Report on Carcinogens, additional epidemiological studies have been identified. In a follow-up of the cohort study by Beard et al., the incidence of lung cancer (bronchogenic carcinoma) was significantly increased in women exposed to metronidazole, and the excess remained after an attempt to adjust for smoking (Beard et al. 1988). In a study of over 12,000 people who had used metronidazole, no excess of cancer (all tissue sites combined) was found after two and a half years of follow-up (IARC 1987). A large cohort study of cancer in children prenatally exposed to metronidazole found no overall excess of cancer (all tissue sites combined); a twofold increase in the risk of neuroblastoma (cancer of the sympathetic nervous system) was not statistically significant (Šapa et al. 1998)
meganpugh wrote: So when I move the chickens to their coop can I move the turkeys to the same enclosure as them? Do they need their own coop?
Metronidazole (Flagyl) earned its `tumorigenic chops' back in 1971. How was that testing accomplished?
http://jnci.oxfordjournals.org/content/48/3/721.abstract
If one is going to feed Metronidazole to one's turks at the same levels (from hatch to sacrifice) as were the mice then, yes, there might be a problem... (but, please, publish!).
Pregnant women are still receiving this drug as the damage done by the diseases treated represent threats that are greater by orders of magnitude than is the cure.
http://ntp.niehs.nih.gov/ntp/roc/twelfth/profiles/Metronidazole.pdf
One time treatment for Histomoniasis? empty shells/bones would be the only `residue' here.
With a big enough run/coop? Probably not a problem. I'd separate out `Thanksgiving' just to keep turk's mind on eating its way to the dinner table without interference from the chooks.
Iv iwned turkeys with chickens for years with out any problems...guess im lucky.
Those of you that have never had a turkey or poult die are very lucky. But let me ask *all* of you this... If you have had some die, how do you know that they did not have histomoniasis?
-Kathy