Thanks Lynx!
Unfortunately Moon can't catch a break. It looks like he may have now have pododermatitis on his two front feet, perhaps on the milder side?
Front left foot:
Front right foot:
This seems to be a new development. None of the vets had reported it previously, and the first time I noticed it was yesterday morning (Feb 14).
I have read the
pododermatitis page and the associated
links page. The optimistic interpretation I can see is this one from pinta:
Non ulcerated bumblefoot cases we ignore. We have noted that bumblefoot comes with inaction. Once a pig starts getting active (after a long illness) the bumblefoot tends to go away...
I don't
think this would be considered ulcerated (yet), so maybe we can wait and see with minimal treatment? In any case, we'll do our best to keep his cage lining more clean and dry. We may also try chlorhexidine ointment or soak, though I'm not sure if it's it's warranted yet? I notice that Baytril is mentioned as a common antibiotic used (for more severe cases?), but given how poorly he reacted to it for the suspected respiratory infection, I don't think it's an option. We also have some animax ointment (nystatin-neomycin sulfate-thiostrepton-triamcinolone acetonide ointment) on hand, but I don't see much mention of antibiotic ointment and I'm not sure it it would be warranted.
I also considered that these could be just spurs. I
think this better matches the photos for pododermatitis, though I could be mistaken.
Moon's two rear feet look fine.
Meanwhile his stools were looking better yesterday, and he
seems to be eating more hay on his own, though this isn't obviously reflected in his weight, and I think we need more time to see if these are real effects.