What do I do to prevent Marek's from spreading?

These chicks will be 5 weeks old on May 16th. The lame leg of my "sick" one, is on the left side. The chicks are eating a chick starter of 18%, they need 16%, but I could not find chick starter with that percentage. I am going to start cutting their feed time down. I usually give feed at 7:30-8:00 am and take it away at 7:00pm. The feed is not medicated as far as I know. I have asked the feed stores around me about medicated chicken feed and they don't have it. Where can I get it and what brand is medicated?

As far as the Marek's spreading--if it is that--- what do I do??
Should I go ahead and treat all my chickens for cocci?

buffchick
 
It doesn't seem like buffchick's question about preventing Marek's from spreading ever got answered in this thread, which is too bad, because I have the same question.

I have a 17 week old RIR pullet who might have Marek's, although she's been sick for over a month and hasn't died, so maybe not??? Her primary symptoms are (1) wobbly legs/difficulty standing aka "drunk chicken" and (2) retarded growth. She doesn't have the curled toes or weird splayed leg position that I have heard indicated Marek's. Anyway, she's still alive and I don't plan to cull her since she seems happy enough.

I have one other RIR pullet who has been in with the sick one all along, and she's fine.

Last weekend, I got an additional chicken. In a way, she's a "back up chicken" in case my sick chicken dies. (I don't want my healthy RIR to be lonely.) My new chicken is a 2-3 month old black sex link. Here's my question:

If my 17 week old RIR has Marek's, that means her healthy-seeming sister may also be a carrier, right? Does that mean when I introduce the new sex link in a month that she will probably get Marek's too? What if I cull the sick chicken before I introduce the new one?

FYI, I don't have any vets that see chickens in my area.
 
I read at another site a snippet that said that turkeys can have a form of Mareks that is not lethal to chickens but that may give them immunity to mareks.Anyone know anything about this?
 
There is no preventing Marek's from spreading. You either cull everything and start over or live with it. There are many posts on this site about Marek's. DHLUnicorn has quite a bit of info on it.

Not sure about the Turkey version. But knowing diseased I doubt that it would give a very effective immunity. It may help with some.
 
I guess I haven't really found many posts on "living with" Mareks. Most people talk about their chickens dying and/or having to be culled.

Could you help out a newbie and direct me to a thread that might have more insight on living with the disease? Since I have a very small backyard flock, I wouldn't mind just accepting the fact that Mareks has contaminated my yard. I would just rather not sentence a bunch of birds to a painful death if I don't have to.

Thanks in advance for your help!
 
My cornish X had the same problem with the bloody stool! They were on medicated feed from day 1 to 3wks, then I put them on 22% gamebird starter. At about 5 weeks I noticed the blood, and immediately gave them terramyacin. Within two days it had cleared up, and they are fine now, normal poops, whatever. I don't know what caused it, however they ARE messy as hell and if being in their own crap can cause it then that's what did it! I had to clean their brooders out twice a day!!! One of my meat chickens has a problem in its left leg as well, and has had this problem for about 2 weeks. I brought it in to give it some vitamins and everything, but it did no good. I realized that its toe is broken or hurt, since one toe is all swollen in one place and he can't put weight on it. Check your chicken's legs, cause I know my chicken got hurt from all the weight of the other ones when they piled up at night. Good luck!!!
 

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