Ulcerative enteritis

artsyrobin

Artful Wings
15 Years
Mar 1, 2009
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Muskogee OK
what antibiotics are needed for enteritis? I have been having losses to what i thought was cocci, but after being on corrid, no change, so am suspecting enteritis
 
It is often in combination with coccidiosis and other parasites.

15 grams per gallon of streptomycin in drinking water for 10 days and 1 gram per gallon for 5 more days.

Thoroughly clean the coop, it resists most disinfectants.

ETA
The CDC says that EPA-registered disinfectants with a sporicidal claim have been used with success.

http://www.cdc.gov/hai/organisms/cdiff/cdiff_faqs_hcp.html#a11
 
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I don't know where one could acquire streptomycin for their birds except from a vet. If someone knows, fill me in. I've treated it in the past by taking Bacitricin (brand name BMD Soluble) and Neomycin powder. I took equal parts and mixed it together dry in a jar. I gave one heaping teaspoon per gallon of water for 10 days.

Baytril (enrofloxacin) injections work and so does Bio-Mycin or LA-200. Dosage for Bio-Mycin or LA-200 is 1cc in the breast muscle large fowl, or 1/2 cc for Bantam sized birds, 2 x a day for 3-5 days. The Enrofloxacin I have is Enfloxil 10% which requires only 1/4 cc injection for a Bantam. Length of treatment is the same (3-5 days).

Edit (correction made above): My memory escaped me on Enfloxil 10% mentioned above. That dose was for a Bantam Wyandotte the last time it was used. 1/2 cc for a large fowl would be sufficient.
 
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what antibiotics are needed for enteritis? I have been having losses to what i thought was cocci, but after being on corrid, no change, so am suspecting enteritis
I have treated what I suspected was enteritis with generic Baytril 10% (Enrofloxacin) at 20mg/kg once a day for no more than 5 days. 20mg/kg is .2ml per 2.2 pounds. You can give it orally or you can inject it. The birds I used it on got better, but I have no way of knowing if they actually had enteritis or not. One thing I noticed about them was that their bellies appeared blue, like they were bruised.

-Kathy

Edited to add:
Some turkey and chick starters have Bacitracin added to help *prevent* enteritis, so it might be a good drug to try for treatment.
 
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I don't know where one could acquire streptomycin for their birds except from a vet. If someone knows, fill me in. I've treated it in the past by taking Bacitricin (brand name BMD Soluble) and Neomycin powder. I took equal parts and mixed it together dry in a jar. I gave one heaping teaspoon per gallon of water for 10 days.

Baytril (enrofloxacin) injections work and so does Bio-Mycin or LA-200. Dosage for Bio-Mycin or LA-200 is 1cc in the breast muscle large fowl, or 1/2 cc for Bantam sized birds, 2 x a day for 3-5 days. The Enrofloxacin I have is Enfloxil 10% which requires only 1/4 cc injection for large fowl. Length of treatment is the same (3-5 days).
I think that neomycin and streptomycin are used to treat the same things, but streptomycin has a lot of side effects. Here you can buy some: https://www.goldbio.com/Streptomycin-Sulfate-100mgmL-Solution-P4567-Cnew.php
 
Streptomycin can't be given orally, only by injection into the muscle. Neomycin is only given orally. They treat the same organisms. They both have a tendency to cause deafness or kidney damage with overdosing, as does gentamycin, the drug that is used more today.
 
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