ShreddedOakAviary
New member
- Jul 13, 2011
- 591
- 5
- Parrots
- M2's, U2's, G2's, RB2's, VOS, RLA's, BFA's, DYHA's, Dusky Pionus, Blue and Green Quakers, Meyers Parrots, VOS, GW Macaw's, Harlequin Macaws, Tiels, YNA, TAG's, CAG's, Blue Crown Conures, Red sided Ecl
I got a phone call last night from my breeder friend and she and I were trying to decide if we should put a goffin on Calcium EDTA while we await blood test results. One of things we have to do often is decide whether to start treatment right away because most tests take a few days to weeks to get back and unfortunately by the time someone drops a bird off with us it usually doesn't have that long.
Anyway it got me thinking and I am gonna just make a short list of birds we have treated for zinc or other metals and what the symptoms were...
Mike (CAG)... severely underweight, would not gain weight, all feathers on left side of body had been plucked off. Taken to vet, zinc levels moderately high (not lethaly high). One months of Calcium EDTA (chelating agent) and we re tested... Lower but not low enough. Contined treatment for another month (.2cc injected 2 times daily)... finally last zinc test (at 200 dollars again), and normal. He put some weight on, grew in some feathers and went on to finally father a fertile clutch. Poor guy went through hell
We also took his mate into the vet for testing and treatment.
Blue (Hyacinth Macaw). Silly bird ate everything in sight for a while when she was weaning... We noticed that her breast muscle wasn't developing despite daily flying sessions. Took her in had some tests run and xrays done. She had eaten some tiny bit of metal. Removed the metal and then treated her for metal toxicity as well. She went on to be just fine and we sold her. (Owner was made fully aware of any and all treatment and that the vet had given her a clean bill of health).
Sometimes the only warning you have with metal poisoning in it's early stages is that the bird is thin, and unfortunately a thin bird can be sick with just about anything. That poor grey and his mate were given to me and still wound up costing about 1200 in vet bills in the first two months.
If you ever get a bird from someone who likes to use breakfast cereal as a treat or food, PLEASE take it in for zinc test. NEVER feed cereal to a bird if you can avoid it... they can only have a tiny bit because of the amount of iron and zinc in cereal.
Just thought I'd share....
Anyway it got me thinking and I am gonna just make a short list of birds we have treated for zinc or other metals and what the symptoms were...
Mike (CAG)... severely underweight, would not gain weight, all feathers on left side of body had been plucked off. Taken to vet, zinc levels moderately high (not lethaly high). One months of Calcium EDTA (chelating agent) and we re tested... Lower but not low enough. Contined treatment for another month (.2cc injected 2 times daily)... finally last zinc test (at 200 dollars again), and normal. He put some weight on, grew in some feathers and went on to finally father a fertile clutch. Poor guy went through hell
We also took his mate into the vet for testing and treatment.
Blue (Hyacinth Macaw). Silly bird ate everything in sight for a while when she was weaning... We noticed that her breast muscle wasn't developing despite daily flying sessions. Took her in had some tests run and xrays done. She had eaten some tiny bit of metal. Removed the metal and then treated her for metal toxicity as well. She went on to be just fine and we sold her. (Owner was made fully aware of any and all treatment and that the vet had given her a clean bill of health).
Sometimes the only warning you have with metal poisoning in it's early stages is that the bird is thin, and unfortunately a thin bird can be sick with just about anything. That poor grey and his mate were given to me and still wound up costing about 1200 in vet bills in the first two months.
If you ever get a bird from someone who likes to use breakfast cereal as a treat or food, PLEASE take it in for zinc test. NEVER feed cereal to a bird if you can avoid it... they can only have a tiny bit because of the amount of iron and zinc in cereal.
Just thought I'd share....