Title: | Captive Breeding for Conservation--and FUN! |
Notice: | INTROS 6.X / FOR SALE 13.X / Buying a Bird 900.* |
Moderator: | VIDEO::PULSIFER |
Created: | Mon Oct 10 1988 |
Last Modified: | Tue Jun 03 1997 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 942 |
Total number of notes: | 6016 |
Hi, Has anyone experienced Conure Bleeding Syndrome? Last Friday I came up from work and my conure (about 5 yrs. old) had blood on her beek and on the cage and was making strange breathing noises. I was frightened and I thought she cut her tongue on the cage somehow. We immediately went to the Vet who diagnosed "Sasha" as having "Conure Bleeding Syndrome" - a deficiency only known to conures which they get from eating a seed diet and not getting enough of calcium and Vitamin K. My bird got injections that evening and the next morning and I got some antibiotics to put in her water. The vet even recommended Sasha to go to an emergency clinic on Friday evening in case she needed oxygen but the cost was anywhere from $75.00 to $300.00 so we just took her home that night and monitored her progress closely. Needless to say, a seed diet will do this for conures so the vet recommends getting the bird on a no-seed diet - not easy when my bird is used to eating seeds! Hopefully she won't bleed anymore but we got extra injections of Vitamin K and calcium to take home just in case... I got some pellets for her to eat now plus the Vet said that conures can eat anything that people do (within reason). So I am trying to get her to eat corn (Vitamin A), Spinach and Parsley (Vitamin K) and some crackers. Has anyone else experienced this or know more about this? When I was in the Vet's office there was an article on "Conure Bleeding Syndrome" in the latest issue of Bird Talk magazine. Nancy
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
484.1 | Yes, we have one here too... | CLOSET::COMPTON | Linda DTN381-0687 ZKO1-2/C21 | Tue Jan 22 1991 13:03 | 26 |
Hi Nancy, We have a little dusky conure that came from a clutch of babies diagnosed with this...he was the only survivor. Our vet said that the jury is still out on what actually causes BCS, but she said that Vitamin K for help in clotting has helped some birds. We use Topper seed, which has acidophilus and vitamins and wheat germ oil and a bunch of other things in it, so the bird is on a seed diet, but gets wet foods a lot with Nekton-MSA sprinkled on (this stuff is full of minerals and calcium, which for some inexplicable reason also helps *some* birds with BCS, but not all). We also lace the wet foods with Prime avian vitamins (available from Hagen Bird Products--costs about the same as Nekton-S but a lot of our birds like Prime's color and 'flavor' better and Prime has three gram-positive active bacteria and acidopholus in it to help the digestive process of the birds). The vet in our case said to be extra careful when cutting nails (we use a dremel tool with a small sandpaper bit like the vets use, rather than clippers or scissors because the high-speed tool cauterizes as you use it). So a high-vitamin, high protein diet, Vitalites for general good health, and the dremel tool are what have worked for us. I still hold my breath when we do his nails though...... I hope your bird lives a long and healthy life. Having found a vet you trust is key here, too, which is the sound of it from your note. Linda |