Vent Gleet/Prolapse/or something else?

brickmom68

In the Brooder
Jan 19, 2022
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I have a sapphire gem, about 2 years old. Hasn’t seemed off her game at all. I was out with the girls yesterday and noticed some pink staining on the feathers along her back and when I was watching her I noticed her butt feathers were filthy and matted. I soaked her in warm water—that goo was very resistant to coming off! She has thick white goo oozing from her vent and her vent is protuberant and cherry red. The surrounding skin looks okay. I cleaned her up, but the white goo is a constant ooze. Her crop seems fine and her demeanor seems normal. I isolated her in my heated garage—so she’s a little salty…her poops seem normal. They eat Dumor layer feed, supplement with oyster shell, BSF treats and the occasional cast of veggies/fruits. I started her on Monistat suppository 2X/day orally and smeared a little cream on her vent. Oh…and today I went to my coop and found a rubber egg from one of my other hens! But all their buts appear fluffy and normal! Photos (graphic) to follow. And additional advice appreciated.
 

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It does look like a prolapsed vent to me. It is important to keep the prolapse moist. I would clean her up, then spray the prolapse with vetrycin or coat with Vaseline and gently push the prolapse back in. Just keep checking it has stayed in, she could prolapse again when passing an egg, a dose of calcium 600 mg plus vitamin D 3 can be helpful if she straining to pass an egg.
 
It does look like a prolapsed vent to me. It is important to keep the prolapse moist. I would clean her up, then spray the prolapse with vetrycin or coat with Vaseline and gently push the prolapse back in. Just keep checking it has stayed in, she could prolapse again when passing an egg, a dose of calcium 600 mg plus vitamin D 3 can be helpful if she straining to pass an egg.
Thank you! Do you think it’s prolapsed AND vent gleet? Am I doing the right thing by giving her Monistat?
 
Thank you! Do you think it’s prolapsed AND vent gleet? Am I doing the right thing by giving her Monistat?
Vent Gleet is a white pasty, yeasty smelling discharge coming from the vent. Have you felt her crop or smell any bad odour coming from her mouth? I would carry on with the Monistat and see how she goes, I would also give her some probiotics.
 
Just to add, has she been laying normally? Have you checked to see if she is struggling to pass an egg? An Epsom salt bath is a good option when you clean her, also if she is struggling to pass an egg.
I have read you can do an Epsom salt flush for vent gleet, but I have no experience, maybe @azygous could advise you on that.
 
Be sure to keep this hen separated inside a dog crate or other way, so that she doesn’t get her vent pecked and damaged while the prolapse is out. It looks like others have been pecking out her feathers under the vent already. They will peck at anything red.
 
This is prolapse most likely caused by a stuck egg or another sort of tissue blockage. In order to treat the prolapse, the stuck egg must be addressed. Others have already mentioned giving calcium. This is a serious health crisis, and calcium is the first important step. Here's the rest:

https://www.backyardchickens.com/ar...ng-from-vent-prolapse-oh-my-what-to-do.76124/
My first impression was a stuck egg. So after I soaked her I was able to get most of the white gunk off. I felt no shell particles or saw no membrane. I thought maybe the white stuff was egg remnants. So white I stared at her recently washed backside I watched a steady ooze of white gunk. The missing feathers is from me, I could not get the mess off her, and with the constant ooze I knew it would just compound, so I trimmed the feathers away. I checked on her this morning, her belly felt soft but protuberant, I gave her some mash and a bit of scrambled egg with calcium, soaked her and massaged her belly. She IS quarantined. And as an aside, in my main coop I found a rubber egg—it’s NOT from the affected chicken. When I separated them I changed the bedding completely. They have free access to calcium, and none of those eggs appear ill or have dirty butts.

I thank you kindly for your input!
 
The white slime is a trademark symptom of a stuck egg. Been though enough of them in my flock to recognize it. There are physical dynamics causing it, which encourage dehydration, so offer her plenty of fresh water. You might put a teaspoon of sugar in it to boost her glucose.

The calcium must be at least 600 mg worth. Anything less will not be effective to encourage the contractions necessary to expel the egg. Give one whole calcium tablet directly into the beak. If it's Tums, the darned tablet is so large, break it in half. But the calcium best suited for this job is calcium citrate as it is digested easier than all the other forms and goes to work faster. This is a health emergency, not to be treated any less than that.
 

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