Pigeon-Talk  
Go Back   Pigeon-Talk > Pigeon Crisis - Emergency! > Sick or Injured Pigeon and Dove Discussions

Notices

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
pigeonperson
Posted 8th March 2007, 04:22 PM
Posts: n/a

Pmv ?


Anyone who reads this is going to become very confused about a true PMV and rightly so:

http://tinyurl.com/2tggcd

Stargazing appears most frequently in finches. Stargazing
is sometimes also referred to as Twirling. The disease appears
to strike at random and without warning or past history of
problems.


Star Gazing is most common in Gouldian Finches but has been
seen in a few other species.


Signs & Symptoms of Star Gazing may include:

* Dizziness
* Throwing head back
* Rolling head from one side to the other
* Looking at the ceiling a lot
* Rolling head upside down
* Gradual loss of balance
* Sleeping with head between legs
* Circling


As disease advances:
* Larger amount of loss of balance/equilibrium
* Difficulty moving around in cage
* Inability to fly
* Inability to perch
* Inability to find food or water dish, resulting in starvation

The end result of stargazing is almost always death.



What Cause Stargazing / Twirling?

Actually, no one really knows for sure what causes star gazing in

birds. Here are a few theories that are out there:

* Viral infection
* Bacterial infection
* Yeast infection
* Chemical imbalance in body
* Vitamin and/or mineral deficiency
* Genetic predisposition
* Inner ear problem


Treatment for Stargazing

There really is no treatment that is effective on a large scale.
Just about any treatment you could imagine has been tried.

Here are three treatments for stargazing that have been reported
as being fairly effective.

1. The drug Nystatin

2. The drug Trimethoprim Sulfa (one drop per day)

3. Vitamin B 12. (one drop in mouth per day, 5 - 6 drops in
8 ounces water)

Breeders commonly cull birds with stargazing symptoms, and
if a bird is cured, they are not allowed to be bred.


Prevention of Stargazing

While there are no absolute certainties, we believe these steps
will go a long way towards prevention, and obviously in keeping
your bird in the overall best health possible.

1. Provide the best nutrition possible for your bird with the
variety it needs.

2. Pure, steam distilled water, kept fresh and uncontaminated.

3. Cage cleanliness.

4. Fresh, pure air.

5. Exercise

6. Love and interaction with your pet.


Reply With Quote
Aias Aias is offline
Posted 8th March 2007, 06:06 PM
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Nueva York
Posts: 191
i must be missing something obvious. is star gazing different from pmv? if not where does the confusion lie?
Reply With Quote
pigeonperson
Posted 8th March 2007, 07:43 PM
Posts: n/a
Look at all the symptoms. They are exactly like PMV. Now look at the causes. PMV is a virus but there are other possible reasons for the symptoms and they aren't necessarily the paramyxo virus.
Reply With Quote
Aias Aias is offline
Posted 8th March 2007, 08:33 PM
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Nueva York
Posts: 191
i see. so stargazing can exist independently of pmv. hmmm.
Reply With Quote
TAWhatley's Avatar
TAWhatley TAWhatley is offline
Posted 8th March 2007, 09:00 PM
Join Date: Mar 2001
Location: Lake Forest, CA, USA
Age: 64
Posts: 20,808
Quote:
Originally Posted by Aias View Post
i see. so stargazing can exist independently of pmv. hmmm.
Yes, paratyphoid, for one can also result in stargazing. This article is basically saying that there are other things that have the same symptoms .. it gets difficult to figure out sometimes ..

Terry
Reply With Quote
JGregg's Avatar
JGregg JGregg is offline
Posted 8th March 2007, 09:11 PM
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Central Valley, California, USA
Age: 33
Posts: 695
I beg to differ about the end result of stargazing being death. Birds which have exhibited stargazing have recovered (quite a few of them actually).
Reply With Quote
TAWhatley's Avatar
TAWhatley TAWhatley is offline
Posted 8th March 2007, 09:14 PM
Join Date: Mar 2001
Location: Lake Forest, CA, USA
Age: 64
Posts: 20,808
Quote:
Originally Posted by JGregg View Post
I beg to differ about the end result of stargazing being death. Birds which have exhibited stargazing have recovered (quite a few of them actually).
Actually most do if given a chance and good supportive care. That's PMV or other viral problems .. if it's paratyphoid or something else that's bacterial or fungal that needs treatment, then you'd better treat it with the appropriate medications.

Terry
Reply With Quote
AZWhitefeather's Avatar
AZWhitefeather AZWhitefeather is offline
Posted 8th March 2007, 09:35 PM
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Mesa, AZ USA
Posts: 7,329
Quote, in part from the article:
Stargazing appears most frequently in finches. Stargazing
is sometimes also referred to as Twirling. The disease appears
to strike at random and without warning or past history of
problems
.


I've never heard of 'stargazing' as being a disease. Rather a 'symptom' of a disease/illness.

Cindy
__________________
A Pigeon's Dream

http://www.pigeonangels.com

As we fly,
Let us be safe from the predators that share the sky.

If we become ill or injured in any way,
Let us find safety where we are welcome to stay.

Cynthia Boyce
Reply With Quote
feralpigeon's Avatar
feralpigeon feralpigeon is offline
Posted 8th March 2007, 09:46 PM
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Northern, CA
Posts: 6,645
Yes, a symptom and with potentially many different pathogenic causes. You know when I went to the site, there was no authorship to the article that I could see. I think this is the value to having citations w/articles as it really does make a difference if written by someone w/a medical background, scientific, etc.

This person raises some good points, though the framework is somewhat confusing, more so than it perhaps should be for a reference material.

fp
Reply With Quote
Feefo's Avatar
Feefo Feefo is offline
Posted 9th March 2007, 01:34 AM
Join Date: Feb 2002
Country: United Kingdom
Location: UK
Posts: 11,074
Quote:
Look at all the symptoms. They are exactly like PMV.
Those are some of the symptoms of PMV seen in another species. Other symptoms of PMV that aren't shared with the finches are the tiny tremors of the eyes (nystagmus), head and wing tremors, wormlike poops, thirst and extremely watery droppings, pecking at seed and missing and seed tossing.

When trying to diagose we have to take everything into account: the species, the history of the bird, all the symptoms , the balance of probabilities that it is one disease rather than another etc.

I may be wrong but that looks like an article about caged finches. If an indoor pigeon presented itself with those symptoms and there was no history of contact with other pigeons then I would consider that the balance of probabilities shifted away from PMV and look at other causes.

We know that other conditions have symptoms that are similar to PMV. So if we are in doubt we look to the difference between PMV and other illnesses to reach a diagnosis or to testing is appropriate. For example, the symptom that paratyphoid shares with PMV is the stargazing. As far as I know the other PMV symptoms are not seen in paratyphoid (but please correct me if I am wrong) There are also two significant differences between PMV and whatever disease the finches suffer from and those are:

a) They don't know the cause and

b) all victims die.

You are right in concluding that anyone reading the link you provided would become confused. I am a bit confused about why you used PMV as you title when I assume that your point is that nervous symptoms can have many causes including PMV.

Cynthia
__________________
...while all the time your dear full-throated pigeons will be heard, and the turtledove high in the elm will never bring her cooing to an end. (Virgil)

Last edited by Feefo; 9th March 2007 at 03:34 AM.
Reply With Quote
Feefo's Avatar
Feefo Feefo is offline
Posted 9th March 2007, 03:10 AM
Join Date: Feb 2002
Country: United Kingdom
Location: UK
Posts: 11,074
I found this on another forum, it is not something that I have tried but I will experiment, if it works it will allay Fred's fears that we may think a pigeon that is "stargazing" has PMV when there could be another cause for that particular symptom. I don't know if this works on finches.:

Quote:
Picked up a useful pointer to tell if its PMV from a DEFRA vet, published in the BHW: Guy had 'neck & head twisting' but thought he was dealing with paratyphoid

Stand close to the bird and point a finger at the wattle. Then slowly scribe a circle with this finger. If the bird has PMV, the bird's head will follow your finger.
http://www.pigeonbasics.com/forum/blah/m-1147225530/
__________________
...while all the time your dear full-throated pigeons will be heard, and the turtledove high in the elm will never bring her cooing to an end. (Virgil)

Last edited by Feefo; 9th March 2007 at 06:34 AM.
Reply With Quote
AZWhitefeather's Avatar
AZWhitefeather AZWhitefeather is offline
Posted 9th March 2007, 06:16 AM
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Mesa, AZ USA
Posts: 7,329
Quote:
Originally Posted by cyro51 View Post
I found this on another forum, it is not something that I have tried but I will experiment, if it works it will allay Fred's fears that we may think a pigeon that is "stargazing" has PMV when there could be another cause for that particular symptom. I don't know if this works on finches.:
That's intresting Cynthia.

Let's hope you won't have the opportunity to perform the experiment for a very, very, long time.

Cindy
__________________
A Pigeon's Dream

http://www.pigeonangels.com

As we fly,
Let us be safe from the predators that share the sky.

If we become ill or injured in any way,
Let us find safety where we are welcome to stay.

Cynthia Boyce
Reply With Quote
pigeonperson
Posted 9th March 2007, 06:55 AM
Posts: n/a
Cynthia,
I should have put a question mark after the title PMV. Other birds exhibit these signs so it doesn't seem limited to finches. I've been to parrot groups and the same theories abound about those birds' stargazing. I had one that did that too but it disappeared over the years.

The reason I posted the item is because the last bird I was telling you about has been stargazing in a way that didn't appear to be like that of other pigeons which have PMV. I can't verbally explain the difference but it was different. Because of that I tried to look up stargazing in birds and came up with this little article. If you remember, I put the bird on Nystatin because the droppings, although looking like PMV, also had the look of a bird that might have a yeast condition plus he was throwing up twice a day and that isn't usual for PMV. The neurological signs are improving too rapidly and that's not the typical course PMV follows so this bird confuses me. I thought he might have another condition besides PMV so he was put on medications. Now, I'm not sure he has PMV at all and yet, a lot of the symptoms were there. I'll just keep going with what I'm doing and I'll let you know what's going on in a few days.
Reply With Quote
Reti's Avatar
Reti Reti is offline
Posted 9th March 2007, 03:47 PM
Join Date: Jul 2003
Country: United States
Location: Miami,Fl
Age: 50
Posts: 9,857
I had King Krames for over three months when he started acting odd (staggering, trembling and looking confused) and a coupke of days later he flew into the wall. After that he showed typical symptoms of PMV. None of my birds showed any symptoms before that or after Krames accident. After about a week he recovered but still a year later he has trouble aiming and picking up seeds and he has tremors once in a while, especially when he gets excited.
My thought was, he might have had PMV sometime earlier in his life and he had a relapse?
Or he could have had something else.
I didn't treat him with antibiotics, just supportive care. I am just wondering.
It is very hard to make a diganosis without lab tests.

Reti
Reply With Quote
mr squeaks's Avatar
mr squeaks mr squeaks is offline
Posted 9th March 2007, 03:54 PM
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Mesa, AZ
Posts: 10,523
Quote:
Originally Posted by Reti View Post
I had King Krames for over three months when he started acting odd (staggering, trembling and looking confused) and a coupke of days later he flew into the wall. After that he showed typical symptoms of PMV. None of my birds showed any symptoms before that or after Krames accident. After about a week he recovered but still a year later he has trouble aiming and picking up seeds and he has tremors once in a while, especially when he gets excited.
My thought was, he might have had PMV sometime earlier in his life and he had a relapse?
Or he could have had something else.
I didn't treat him with antibiotics, just supportive care. I am just wondering.
It is very hard to make a diganosis without lab tests.

Reti
Wouldn't be some type of ear infection could it??
Reply With Quote
Reply

Tags
bacterial infection, brewers yeast, yeast infection, young pigeon


Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Sitemap:1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48
All times are GMT -7. The time now is 02:39 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.0
Copyright ©2000 - 2013, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
© 2000-2013 pigeons.biz