CharlieBaby
Chirping
- Jun 23, 2020
- 64
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I have a sick bird in need of Baytril (enrofloxacin), and I need help determining the correct measurements. I purchased "Enrofloxacin 10% Powder." The packaging includes instructions for administering the drug in drinking water, but because my chicken is not drinking much and the taste of Baytril further discourages drinking, I need to syringe feed the medicine. My plan is to determine the correct powder dose and then add a small amount of water to the powder so it can be administered orally via syringe.
Here are the figures:
Thank you!
Here are the figures:
- Chicken is 4 lb
- Single dose is 10 mg Baytril/kg (4.54 mg Baytril/lb)
- Product is "Enrofloxacin 10% Powder"
- The packaging says, "Contains: 10g of Enrofloxacin per 100g" (pic attached). Does this mean that 10% of the powder is the active ingredient enrofloxacin and the other 90% is filler?
- The packaging also says, "Dosage: 1 Teaspoon (5 grams) per 1 gallon of drinking water for 5-7 consecutive days." If mixed as directed, would this mean the gallon of water would have only .5 grams of active ingredient enrofloxacin?
- Assuming points 1 and 2 are true, I think I need .036 tsp of enrofloxacin powder per dose for my chicken (calculations attached). I will administer two doses per day for five days. Does this calculation seem correct?
- Any tips or tricks for working with such a small amount of powdered medicine?
Thank you!