by Pajarita » Sun Oct 12, 2014 12:52 pm
Or uric acid? Because high levels of it is also a consequence of a high protein diet (uric acid been the kidneys 'leftover' product of protein metabolizing). But, normally, when you have high uric acid levels, you also have liver issues. I say normally because you can also get high uric acid from a diet too high in purines (in humans -we don't know in birds- 30% of uric acid comes from high purines but the other 70% comes from cells that die due to a bad diet). A diet high in purines is usually a diet that has too much meat in it and a lot of people, for some stupid reason, think it's fine to feed a parrot meat but there are vegetables that also have too much purine (spinach, cauliflower, lentils, navy beans, lima beans, oatmeal, peas, asparagus). Now, as long as the diet is low in protein and contains no meat whatsoever, you can feed these veggies as long as it's done sparingly (I feed lentils and peas regularly, cauliflower very seldom, asparagus once in a blue moon and spinach, lima and navy bean never). If the problem is uric acid, I can give you a diet and herbals that will reduce it. I've had several birds come to me with it and I lowered it to normal levels in a matter of a few months completely naturally (vets would sometimes want to prescribe allopurinol but it has bad liver side effects so I would not recommend it). As an FYI, the normal results for ionized calcium levels in African grays (and you are lucky it's a gray because it's the one species that has gotten tested and studied for it) is 0.96 to 1.22 mmol/L.