by Pajarita » Tue Nov 26, 2013 4:07 pm
If you cannot find an avian vet, you can observe her and see if you can find something that will indicate liver trouble: overgrown beak, claws that grow too fast, dull plumage, greasy plumage, fat deposits on the belly (blow on the feathers covering the abdomen to separate them and look at the skin to see if there is a yellowish tinge to it, if it does, there is fat under it).
Personally, I put all my new birds on a liver detox treatment because it can never hurt and it always helps (my birds are all rescues or rehomes). The treatment consists of organic aloe vera juice (not gel and only from inner filet, not from the whole leaf) in their water (2/3 water, 1/3 aloe vera juice) as well as liquid milk thistle and dandelion root extract (I do two squirts of milk thistle to one of dandelion root in a medium size bowl of water). To their food (I feed gloop so it's easy for me to do this), I add more milk thistle, more dandelion root, vit B6, folic acid, artichoke extract and a human pro-biotic that has the most number of strains you can find (usually 15 or so). Every second day, I add some B12. I try to get these things in capsules but some of them only come in pill form so I crush them in a mortar and mix them with the rest. Now, I do this in a large scale (I have birds that came to me in liver failure so they get the treatment every day for the rest of their lives) so you would have to calculate how much you would need for a single bird but the solution is to make a large batch of soft food and add one human dosage (it's on the bottle) to the whole thing. It seems like a lot but the human dosages are meant for maintenance and you need a stronger one for a detox and, besides, nothing in there can be overdosed.