T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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183.1 | | CSC32::K_WORKMAN | HSC/SHADOW Tech Leader 522-4990 | Tue May 30 1989 10:30 | 17 |
| Hi Sue,
I would get another Vet involved. I know of a lady who purchased a
Moluccan. Every week she was taking the bird to the Vet to get his
beak trimmed. Can you believe the Vet never realized that birds don't
need their beaks trimmed but once in a great while! Her Moluccan was
an import. She told someone about this at bird meeting and was told to
immediately take it to an avian vet. She took the bird in, but the
bird didn't come home with her. Beak and Feather disease is a highly
contageous disease. From everything I have heard, if a bird is
diagnosed with this, they Vet is required to put the bird down.
I know this isn't good news... and I'm sorry but without an avian vet
making a proper diagnosis, you won't know if your friends bird can
be saved or not.
Karen.
|
183.2 | Experimental treatment available | DELNI::G_KNIGHTING | Thinkingspeakingthinkingspeaking. | Tue May 30 1989 14:31 | 12 |
|
A recent issue of BIRD TALK magazine had a short article on
PBFD, and noted that some infected birds have responded well to
intravenous gamma globulin. This is a new treatment, and it's not
guaranteed -- it's also probably expensive.
I'd agree with .1. Get a second opinion from a qualified avian
vet if you can find one.
Good luck.
GK.
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183.3 | Thanks from Canada | BRADOR::CONNOLLY | | Tue May 30 1989 15:20 | 18 |
|
Thanks for the advice. Im trying to reach my sister now. Any chance
of getting a photocopy of that article? My Mailstop is KAO 2/3.
I would be grateful.
Have you ever seen a bird with this disease? Where would the parrot
have gotten it from (he 'flew the coop' 3 years ago and was found
40 miles away having a great time with a flock of crows by a bunch
of birders who caught him and returned him) but he hasnt been near
a pet store in over 10 years ... would it incubate this long??
As Ive said, shes VERY upset and would hate to lose this bird.
I will let you know what happens.
Thanks for your concern.
Sue
|
183.4 | | CSC32::K_WORKMAN | HSC/SHADOW Tech Leader 522-4990 | Wed May 31 1989 09:22 | 3 |
| Beak and Feather Disease has been compared to the AIDS virus in people.
I believe that birds can harbor/incubate this disease for sometime
before signs of the disease actually start appearing.
|
183.5 | Article coming... | DELNI::G_KNIGHTING | Thinkingspeakingthinkingspeaking. | Wed May 31 1989 14:21 | 7 |
| Re: .3
The article is pretty sketchy, but FWIW, it's on the way.
Hope it helps.
GK
|
183.6 | PBFD | AKOCOA::ROLLINS | five fuzzies | Wed Jul 26 1995 23:46 | 31 |
| Hi,
PBFD is really spooking me...We are thinking about getting
another bird, but frankly I don't know if it is worth risking
the one we have now. I went to my local pet store tonight
and asked if they had their birds tested and they looked at
me like I was a loon (ok, bad bird joke..).
I don't know if anyone else subscribes to the EXOTIC-L mailing
list, but there is a breeder from CA that is going through
her second bout with this thing in 6 months (she had to put
down her cockatiel and lovebird babies so far, and is now
moving into her larger birds :(. It's the saddest thing
I have ever heard. This woman is like a walking bird encyclopedia...
the disease was brought into her aviary from a boarder).
We would definately quarantine a new bird for sixty days
or so, have it tested, etc. Has anyone else had any
problems with approaching it like this? I want to be
as sure as possible before we do this.
Thanks,
beth
P.S. It's getting like you have to keep all your pets in
isolation these days..Kennel cough in dogs, strangles in
horses (and EIA), "greenies" in ferrets, feline leukemia...
we're all going to wind up keeping ourselves and our loved
ones hermetically sealed up.
|