Lovebird94
New member
- Dec 30, 2020
- 4
- 0
Hello Everyone,
Happy Holidays. I hope you are all doing well and staying safe.
I need some advice on my 13 year old blue pied peach face lovebird, Romeo. Iām sorry if I ramble, but I am pretty anxious. Iāve had him since 2007, and he means the world to me. Today, I recently took him to the vet, because I notice his stool was mainly liquid/drinking a lot of water, and he was not as active. The vet said that he had a minor respiratory infection, and gave me antibiotics for him to take via syringe (.06 ml every 12 hours). Iāve never given him medicine via syringe, so I was pretty nervous. I wrapped him in a towel, made sure that he was in a vertical position and tried to slowly push the medicine on the left side of his beak.The syringe opening faced the right side not directly in his throat. I know I was nervous but I did the best that I could.
After giving him the medicine, I feel like I gave it to him too quickly. He started making a funny noise I havenāt heard before. Like the title points out, I can best describe it as a cough/sneeze/choke sound. He flew off afterwards and started making the sounds. There was some nasal discharge and he seemed to be yawning a lot. Though I donāt know if the yawning is choking or aspirating. Itās not horribly violent, it just made me insanely worried.
The noises stopped for a minute or two, then he flew to my dad and it started again. He had a couple more episodes lasting about a minute each.
I collected him and put him back in his cage and he drank a little bit of water and some food. He still had a couple episodes, but again not violent. I cleaned the discharge off with a soft qtip, and put him a quiet, dark room.
My avian doctors office is closed, so I called the emergency vet to ask their opinion. The vet tech over the phone said it didn't sound too serious, probably stress related because of the entire day and him taking meds for the first time via syringe. I was also advised that I should monitor him closely, put him in a quiet spot and to take him in if heās worse.
Iām pretty frazzled, since this has never happened before. Can anyone please give me advice on what to do? The emergency vet is over an hour away, and the one available doesnāt specialize in birds.
Thank you so so much!
Happy Holidays. I hope you are all doing well and staying safe.
I need some advice on my 13 year old blue pied peach face lovebird, Romeo. Iām sorry if I ramble, but I am pretty anxious. Iāve had him since 2007, and he means the world to me. Today, I recently took him to the vet, because I notice his stool was mainly liquid/drinking a lot of water, and he was not as active. The vet said that he had a minor respiratory infection, and gave me antibiotics for him to take via syringe (.06 ml every 12 hours). Iāve never given him medicine via syringe, so I was pretty nervous. I wrapped him in a towel, made sure that he was in a vertical position and tried to slowly push the medicine on the left side of his beak.The syringe opening faced the right side not directly in his throat. I know I was nervous but I did the best that I could.
After giving him the medicine, I feel like I gave it to him too quickly. He started making a funny noise I havenāt heard before. Like the title points out, I can best describe it as a cough/sneeze/choke sound. He flew off afterwards and started making the sounds. There was some nasal discharge and he seemed to be yawning a lot. Though I donāt know if the yawning is choking or aspirating. Itās not horribly violent, it just made me insanely worried.
The noises stopped for a minute or two, then he flew to my dad and it started again. He had a couple more episodes lasting about a minute each.
I collected him and put him back in his cage and he drank a little bit of water and some food. He still had a couple episodes, but again not violent. I cleaned the discharge off with a soft qtip, and put him a quiet, dark room.
My avian doctors office is closed, so I called the emergency vet to ask their opinion. The vet tech over the phone said it didn't sound too serious, probably stress related because of the entire day and him taking meds for the first time via syringe. I was also advised that I should monitor him closely, put him in a quiet spot and to take him in if heās worse.
Iām pretty frazzled, since this has never happened before. Can anyone please give me advice on what to do? The emergency vet is over an hour away, and the one available doesnāt specialize in birds.
Thank you so so much!