An interesting approach to giving meds
Posted: Mon Feb 20, 2012 6:50 pm
My fifteen month old daughter managed to open one of my zebra cages today, and Enzo, an eight month old pied, got out. My cat immediately caught him out of the air and carried him into the kitchen. Fortunately, this cat has never been a hunter and she set him down and sat there looking confused.
Enzo lost all of the feathers on his head, and a patch of skin ripped off. Fearing that he may have had contact with the cat's saliva, I washed his woud, stuck him in the hospital cage and called the vet. We do not have an avian vet, so this was a regular small animal vet. She checked her sources and prescribed Trimethoprim sulfamethoxozole (TMS.)
He's to get 0.01mL twice a day. That is a fraction of a single drop of water. The tech gave me a 1cc syringe, but the dose is still 1/100 of that. So, as I've fed babies by pipette before, she had the thought of giving me a capillary tube. It works very well. For those unfamiliar with lab equipment, it is a small glass tube. And by small, I mean less than 0.5mm across. This particular one has a mark on it for 0.01mL.
I put it on the tip of his beak, and the capillary action takes it into his mouth. It's the perfect solution.
Enzo lost all of the feathers on his head, and a patch of skin ripped off. Fearing that he may have had contact with the cat's saliva, I washed his woud, stuck him in the hospital cage and called the vet. We do not have an avian vet, so this was a regular small animal vet. She checked her sources and prescribed Trimethoprim sulfamethoxozole (TMS.)
He's to get 0.01mL twice a day. That is a fraction of a single drop of water. The tech gave me a 1cc syringe, but the dose is still 1/100 of that. So, as I've fed babies by pipette before, she had the thought of giving me a capillary tube. It works very well. For those unfamiliar with lab equipment, it is a small glass tube. And by small, I mean less than 0.5mm across. This particular one has a mark on it for 0.01mL.
I put it on the tip of his beak, and the capillary action takes it into his mouth. It's the perfect solution.