Peeper

Jun. 12th, 2006 09:35 am
[personal profile] asterroc
Last night I got home from a friend's wedding around 11 or 12 at night. I went over to Peeper's cage and usually she either lunges at my finger, or steps right up. This time she stumbled forward, falling onto her chest. She then crawled across the botton of the cage (she had been sitting in an unusual corner of the bottom for her) - her feet weren't working right, and she was using her wings a bit. Further examination and some time (maybe a half hour) revealed the she was not properly using either foot - she wasn't able to clench them, and her right wing was drooping as well.

During this process, when it became clear that her issues were more than "I've just been woken up" grogginess (yes, birds get it too), I realized that I needed to take her to an emergency room. As I continued watching her, and scratching her (she didn't seem to be in any pain and really enjoyed being scratched), I enlisted the help of a couple people online in finding info as I called my vet, then the animal hospital they recommended in Boston (an hour's drive), googled another affiliated one in Springfield (also an hour), and finally pinpointed one located less than ten miles from here.

Into the car we went, I got lost on the way b/c I hadn't taken the time to get good directions (drove 20 minutes out of the way *grumble grumble*), but finally got her there (Tufts animal hospital in N Grafton). A student did the first examination, it was interesting b/c she had no bird experience so was learning from Peeper, then a real vet looked her over, said she was thin, recommended and I did that she stay overnight and be fed and such. $700 estimated, $350 deposit. The emergency vet wasn't an expert in birds though she'd had some experience, so all she could say was that Peeper was thin and <ETA> maybe had lead poisoning or maybe had some neurological problem. She also said Peeper was very friendly and sweet - they always do, it's nice to hear that I've been raising her right. </ETA>

This morning the exotics vet (yeah, birds are "exotics" - same as pocket pets and lizards) checked her out and started blood work and is about to take x-rays. She is significantly underweight, some 15% (they usually say that if a bird loses 10% she's got a significant chance of not making it) at 65g instead of her usual 75-85g; she has a mass in her abdomen, most likely possibility is an egg and she has egg binding; the movement issues may be caused by pain from the potential egg, or by pain from potential kidney stones; the weight loss could be due to kidney problems (renal function, an issue she's had before).

The vet told me right out he's not sure if she's going to make it. I didn't ask for a percent.

Date: 2006-06-12 02:22 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rubicat.livejournal.com
Ditto on what freakylynx said. If she's still young and vibrant... there are plenty of ways out there to re-nourish animals, as long as they still have the fight in them. Sounds like she was still responsive to you, so it would make sense that as soon as they get some nutrition in her and deal with the egg, she will feel better and begin to heal herself.

Thoughts are with you. I hate to hear pet-suffering stories. Here's hoping she recovers quickly!

Date: 2006-06-12 02:41 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] zandperl.livejournal.com
She's 16 years old on a life expectancy of 15-20. Other than the current issues (including the feather plucking) I'd definitely say she was vibrant though. Interestingly the vet said he's not worried about the feather plucking. I guess there's more crucial problems. :( Thanks for the well-wishes.

Profile

asterroc

April 2017

S M T W T F S
      1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
232425 26272829
30      

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jul. 10th, 2025 09:32 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios