Highly excessive water intake
Posted: Sun Jan 29, 2012 4:25 pm
Has anybody ever noticed one of their finches drinking water excessively and having several watery droppings each day over a long period of time -- yet otherwise seemingly very healthy and not showing any other signs of illness whatsoever?
I first noticed my young male Gouldian drinking MUCH water water than usual a few days before Christmas...around Dec. 21 or 22. He also began having 2-3 droppings daily that were mostly clear water -- very little if any solids (not at all surprising, given the extra water intake). Notably, in addition to these watery droppings, he also has normal-looking droppings every day, as well. Both the high water intake and watery droppings have continued rather consistently for the past 5 weeks.
There is nothing at all unusual about his behavior otherwise, other than the fact his hormones still seem to be in overdrive. His appetite is normal -- although for a few days in the beginning he seemed to be eating slightly less than normal, that hasn't been the case for the past month. Today he seems to be eating as much as he ever did. He is alert, active, and flies around the cage as much as always. And he is continually courting (and at times trying to mount) his mate -- and occasionally even his 3 chicks.
None of the other 4 birds in the cage with him have shown any of these symptoms, so whatever the culprit, it seems not to be microbial or they would have it, too. I took him to a vet a week and a half ago, and she found a higher-than-normal white blood cell count, leading her to think he may have a urinary tract infection. She dispensed oral antibiotic drops and I treated him with those for 10 days, but it made no difference at all. He is drinking as much (in fact, probably a little more) in recent days than before the treatment. Normally he will drink 2-3 sips of water at a time. When these symptoms began, he sometimes (not always) was drinking 8-10 sips at a time. But in recent days he sometimes will drink up to 12-16 sips at a time -- so it seems to be worsening, not improving. The vet sent off his droppings for gram-stain testing, and the results showed normal levels of bacteria -- nothing unusual at all. However, I suspect his high water intake may have diluted the bacteria count significantly -- so it may have appeared normal, when perhaps it wasn't.
The vet mentioned possible liver or kidney problems, but said he likely would be showing actual signs of illness by now if that were the case. At her suggestion, I've added some milk thistle seed extract to his diet, and now that his antibiotic treatment is over, I've also resumed adding some probiotics to their seed. I gave them probiotics for a week when these problems first began, and he seemed to drink slightly less water and have fewer watery droppings for a few days....but as quickly as I stopped the probiotics, the problems worsened again. I'm reluctant to do probiotics long-term, for more than a week at a time.
After researching avian kidney and liver ailments, I learned that in addition to microbes there are 2 other very common causes -- toxic items in their environment, and vitamin deficiency. I'm extremely careful about anything that goes into their cage, and avoid metal with lead or zinc. Any produce they get is organic, and I even wash that carefully in filtered water. In fact, ALL their water (even bathwater) is carefully filtered through a 3-stage water filter. And I thoroughly wash my hands before touching them or anything that goes inside their cage. There simply isn't any toxin that he could be ingesting, at least nothing that I can pinpoint. And even so, if there were such a toxin, I would think the other birds would be affected too -- and they aren't.
So that leaves vitamin deficiency -- and I honestly can't imagine that is what's happening. In addition to adding a multi-vitamin powder to their seed, along with both wheat-germ and cod-liver oil, I also make sure they have regular access to fresh kale, dried fruit and vegetables (carrots, spinach, etc.), Miracle Meal, and vitamin-infused pellets that are regularly mixed with their seed. And I realize this is debatable, but they also may be producing a very small amount of Vitamin D from the UV lighting overhead. But even without the lighting, they should have more than adequate access to all essential vitamins.
I am completely stumped, and so is my vet. Even though she regularly treats finches and seems very knowledgeable about their care, she suggested I take him to an advanced avian specialist nearby for hospitalization and more extensive testing. But after already spending almost $300 for the first vet's visit, I'm reluctant to invest another $600-700 now -- as much as I love the little guy, and especially not knowing if it even would do any good. I'm hoping to resolve this problem before it becomes an untreatable condition, beyond any hope. But I'm running out of options here.
Has anybody seen this before, and how did you resolve it?
I first noticed my young male Gouldian drinking MUCH water water than usual a few days before Christmas...around Dec. 21 or 22. He also began having 2-3 droppings daily that were mostly clear water -- very little if any solids (not at all surprising, given the extra water intake). Notably, in addition to these watery droppings, he also has normal-looking droppings every day, as well. Both the high water intake and watery droppings have continued rather consistently for the past 5 weeks.
There is nothing at all unusual about his behavior otherwise, other than the fact his hormones still seem to be in overdrive. His appetite is normal -- although for a few days in the beginning he seemed to be eating slightly less than normal, that hasn't been the case for the past month. Today he seems to be eating as much as he ever did. He is alert, active, and flies around the cage as much as always. And he is continually courting (and at times trying to mount) his mate -- and occasionally even his 3 chicks.

None of the other 4 birds in the cage with him have shown any of these symptoms, so whatever the culprit, it seems not to be microbial or they would have it, too. I took him to a vet a week and a half ago, and she found a higher-than-normal white blood cell count, leading her to think he may have a urinary tract infection. She dispensed oral antibiotic drops and I treated him with those for 10 days, but it made no difference at all. He is drinking as much (in fact, probably a little more) in recent days than before the treatment. Normally he will drink 2-3 sips of water at a time. When these symptoms began, he sometimes (not always) was drinking 8-10 sips at a time. But in recent days he sometimes will drink up to 12-16 sips at a time -- so it seems to be worsening, not improving. The vet sent off his droppings for gram-stain testing, and the results showed normal levels of bacteria -- nothing unusual at all. However, I suspect his high water intake may have diluted the bacteria count significantly -- so it may have appeared normal, when perhaps it wasn't.

The vet mentioned possible liver or kidney problems, but said he likely would be showing actual signs of illness by now if that were the case. At her suggestion, I've added some milk thistle seed extract to his diet, and now that his antibiotic treatment is over, I've also resumed adding some probiotics to their seed. I gave them probiotics for a week when these problems first began, and he seemed to drink slightly less water and have fewer watery droppings for a few days....but as quickly as I stopped the probiotics, the problems worsened again. I'm reluctant to do probiotics long-term, for more than a week at a time.
After researching avian kidney and liver ailments, I learned that in addition to microbes there are 2 other very common causes -- toxic items in their environment, and vitamin deficiency. I'm extremely careful about anything that goes into their cage, and avoid metal with lead or zinc. Any produce they get is organic, and I even wash that carefully in filtered water. In fact, ALL their water (even bathwater) is carefully filtered through a 3-stage water filter. And I thoroughly wash my hands before touching them or anything that goes inside their cage. There simply isn't any toxin that he could be ingesting, at least nothing that I can pinpoint. And even so, if there were such a toxin, I would think the other birds would be affected too -- and they aren't.
So that leaves vitamin deficiency -- and I honestly can't imagine that is what's happening. In addition to adding a multi-vitamin powder to their seed, along with both wheat-germ and cod-liver oil, I also make sure they have regular access to fresh kale, dried fruit and vegetables (carrots, spinach, etc.), Miracle Meal, and vitamin-infused pellets that are regularly mixed with their seed. And I realize this is debatable, but they also may be producing a very small amount of Vitamin D from the UV lighting overhead. But even without the lighting, they should have more than adequate access to all essential vitamins.
I am completely stumped, and so is my vet. Even though she regularly treats finches and seems very knowledgeable about their care, she suggested I take him to an advanced avian specialist nearby for hospitalization and more extensive testing. But after already spending almost $300 for the first vet's visit, I'm reluctant to invest another $600-700 now -- as much as I love the little guy, and especially not knowing if it even would do any good. I'm hoping to resolve this problem before it becomes an untreatable condition, beyond any hope. But I'm running out of options here.
Has anybody seen this before, and how did you resolve it?
