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 Feet: string and thread injuries

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Cynthia

Cynthia


Posts : 733
Join date : 2009-01-17
Location : England

Feet: string and thread injuries Empty
PostSubject: Feet: string and thread injuries   Feet: string and thread injuries Icon_minitimeSun Mar 29, 2009 10:27 am

Feet: string and thread injuries 1144920899044786621S425x425Q85

This pigeon was found lying on the pavement with its wings outstretched as it tried to compete for food. In this photo I have softened the foot with Bach Flower Remedy and am starting to remove the thread using a seam splitter to lift it and scissors to cut it. The photos of the foot after the thread was removed are at the end of this post.


In any town or city centre you will see many pigeons with some toes or even the whole foot missing. Others will be visibly lame with their feet swollen and deformed. This is the effect of getting their feet tangled in cotton thread, fishing line, human hair etc. As they walk the string becomes tighter, often cutting off circulation so that the toes or part of the foot becomes necrotic, other times allowing bacteria inside the foot which sets up an infection.


From a distance, birds may be seen attempting to walk and falling over. This may have various causes, but the most common cause is that the feet tied together with thread. Feet with blackened, swollen parts may be a sign of embedded thread.


Treatment:

In cases of recent entanglement, and fairly loose thread, this can be relatively simple. When thread is embedded or of long-standing, it can be a delicate process. In the worst cases, the solution may be to have the entire foot amputated below the 'ankle' or “hock joint”. This joint is often perceived as the pigeon's “knee”.

Many tangles can be resolved with a small kit comprising such items as a seam splitter, small nail scissors, and small tweezers.

Before you start examine the foot carefully. Yellow bits are a sign of infection that will need to be treated with antibiotics. Blackened flesh is dead and dangerous to poke about in as that could cause a severe bleed. If the string has done significant damage to the foot then it might be a good idea to take it to the vet who will have specialised instruments to do the job and also be able to provide emergency treatment if there is a bleed.

I usually start by rubbing Bach Rescue Cream (available from Boots and Neals Yard in the UK) into the foot, this softens any muck and, in my experience, also loosens the string, probably because it reduces swelling.

I often have to improvise but these are some of the things I use when treating string injuries:

* Baby scissors with blunt ends, because these can be used to snip thread that is embedded into the skin without cutting the flesh.

* A seam splitter (a dressmaking tool for picking stitches which has a blunted end) for separating the thread from the flesh before cutting it.

* A pair of reading glasses

* Antibacterial cream to rub in the wound.

* Painkiller - I use a single drop of Metacam (available from the vet) in the inside tip of the pigeon’s beak as a painkiller .

* Cotton buds, sterile gauze and cornflour to treat minor bleeds.

* A pair of small sharp scissors to cut the thread.

When you examine a bird always ensure that the head is raised so that there is no danger of regurgitation that could cause it to aspirate and die. It sometimes helps to lay a piece of gauze over its face to reduce struggling most will remain still and quiet during thread removal.

In a lot of cases the thread or string is visible and therefore quite easy to remove just by patiently snipping and unwinding. It sometimes takes several goes, with rests for the pigeon and the rescuer in between. I always cut the bit that links the feet together first, so that if the pigeon escapes it is that little bit better off. Then I start with the loosest bits, snipping and gently unwinding, taking care not to pull so that the thread doesn’t cut further into the flesh.

If there is any bleeding at all I stop what I am doing, apply direct pressure to the area and hold the foot up in the air to inhibit the blood flow. For major bleeds I have had to use a tourniquet, but the pigeon has also needed treatment for shock: quiet, warmth and fluid replacement..

When all the thread is removed I treat open wounds with antibacterial cream, otherwise I rub Bach Rescue Cream into the foot immediately and continue to do that 3 times a day. I usually keep the pigeon for some time after the string removal, to treat any other related problems. Sometimes the thread or string will that tied the back toe inward, or twisted other toes and splinting will be required.

Some pigeons can be freed of string “on the spot” and released immediately. Many pigeon rescuers ]carry a “foot repair kit” at all times, just in case they come across a pigeon in need.



Feet: string and thread injuries 1144921247044786621S425x425Q85


This shows the foot after the thread had been removed.


Feet: string and thread injuries 1145029935044786621S425x425Q85

And here are its feet 10 days later, during the interval it had Bach Rescue cream rubbed on it twice a day.

Feet: string and thread injuries 1145031210044786621S200x200Q85

But this is the photo of a foot that was already too damaged by the time we saw the pigeon, it had to be amputated


Last edited by Cynthia on Mon Jul 06, 2009 11:40 am; edited 5 times in total
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AZWhitefeather
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AZWhitefeather


Posts : 10863
Join date : 2009-01-11
Location : Arizona Southwestern United States

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PostSubject: Re: Feet: string and thread injuries   Feet: string and thread injuries Icon_minitimeSun Mar 29, 2009 3:34 pm

The story about this bird can be read in the Illness and Injury discussion forum.
Here's the link.

Hair (not string) injury


Feet: string and thread injuries Foot_w11
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