Bumble foot - is this how it should be healing?

dhumaigobae

Chirping
7 Years
Sep 3, 2016
5
3
64
Pittsburgh, PA
Hi everyone-

I need some advice. I have a nearly 10 year old chicken who was attacked by a racoon 2 months ago (all in the coop were injured or killed). At first she showed no outward injury- we thought she had been shoved off the roost in the panic of the other birds and it seemed the ankle was broken or badly sprained as she was favouring it heavily, hopping and the leg itself at the ankle was grossly swollen.

We splinted this and kept her indoors and the swelling began to go down. Once she got restless to go back out I put her out with the splint and took it off when she really wanted to walk without it. Seemed to be doing well.

A week later I saw her laying in the yard and inspecting our back camera it seemed she had been laying by herself in a corner. On inspection I found her belly completely bare of feathers and she was markedly thinner. I took her indoors and found that same foot was swollen grossly again and the bottom was completely black. When I spread the toes this time I found that the third toe was deeply split into the flesh so I assume this is where infection got in. Over the next day or so it turned green and pussed and so she was brought in and set up more permanently in our dog’s large crate with towels for padding.

We’d never had a bird with a bumble before and didn’t know what to do- a few days later the black area got so big and hard I ended up removing with a sterile blade. At this point my poor bird wouldn’t eat, was very thin and her feathers were falling out by the handful. I didn’t think she’d make it. A friend of mine found reference to treating with Cephlex and I happened to have an unused bottle so we did a 21 day course by dropper, using Vetricyn poultry spray on the area and changing a gauze dressing with applied neosporin daily and some soaking in iodine.

Well she came back- rapidly gained her weight back, feathers have filled out and she’s eating treats and talking back per her usual and I put her out in the soft grassy part of our property a few hours a day to get some exercise and see her sisters through the fence.

But the foot is still quite swollen. Please see photos- the bumbled foot vs the healthy one. This is nothing like the swelling when this started - her entire leg was literally 6x the width of the other, it blew up so fast. But I am concerned with the bottom of the foot- do you think this is another bumble or a thick scabbing that just is taking a while to heal? She’s doing excellent in every other way but still limping on this leg. I don’t want to put her back out until I am confident she can hold onto a roost to sleep. Any advice would be appreciated- we are in an urban area with no vet for chickens and have never had this issue before with any of our birds.
 

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Wow that is quite the ordeal. It sounds like you’ve done so great with her, especially for being almost 10 years old, wonderful job. I’m going to be honest, those pictures make it a little hard to tell; they are a bit blurry. But from experience I know how hard it is to get a good chicken foot pic!

I had a hard time telling by site, too, if my hen’s was healing. But what did help was the feeling of it. When I treated my hen’s bumble foot, I kept feeling around for the pus inside her foot. I soaked and removed scabs and squeezed out all the pus until there were no more hard masses and all that was left was soft squishy tissue. Are you able to feel any hard pus inside the soft foot tissue?
 
Pic 1 does not look like a bumble to me but the second one kind of does because it looks like some round swelling around the blackend part. I can't make out the third pic.

Definitely some kind of injury with infection. It couldn't hurt to do epsom salt soaks and wrap it with plain antibiotic ointment. I have also used Medihoney and prid drawing salve.
 
Wow that is quite the ordeal. It sounds like you’ve done so great with her, especially for being almost 10 years old, wonderful job. I’m going to be honest, those pictures make it a little hard to tell; they are a bit blurry. But from experience I know how hard it is to get a good chicken foot pic!

I had a hard time telling by site, too, if my hen’s was healing. But what did help was the feeling of it. When I treated my hen’s bumble foot, I kept feeling around for the pus inside her foot. I soaked and removed scabs and squeezed out all the pus until there were no more hard masses and all that was left was soft squishy tissue. Are you able to feel any hard pus inside the soft foot tissue?
I did today soak her in epsom and removed the scab pictured- went well, there was no hardness underneath it, just a lot of swelling that had been going down but stopped as that scab got darker. I did see on here a low dosing of baby aspirin for pain so she is wrapped in new clean bandages in clean bedding with a dose of that and is stuffing her face now with treats lol. I wasn’t able to squeeze anything out like pus so hoping this will be her final round with this.
 
I did today soak her in epsom and removed the scab pictured- went well, there was no hardness underneath it, just a lot of swelling that had been going down but stopped as that scab got darker. I did see on here a low dosing of baby aspirin for pain so she is wrapped in new clean bandages in clean bedding with a dose of that and is stuffing her face now with treats lol. I wasn’t able to squeeze anything out like pus so hoping this will be her final round with this.
Sounds like you did get everything. I hope she is on the way to a full recovery. You might try a hot compress if she has further swelling. If you haven’t tried that already, it could help with stubborn infection expression versus soaking. Let us know how she gets along after this!
 

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