@Gandolf Sounds like he is doing better. The foot, of course will take time -keep up the physical therapy.
Hand feeding him is an excellent plan. He needs fuel and that is a good way to get it.
He appears to me as if he had a stroke. Strokes almost always leave some permanent or semi-permanent damage while seizures rarely do have consequences that last over a few hours.
Amazons are one of the top three species at the highest risk for atherosclerosis (plaque gathering in the circulatory system and restricting circulation) often atherosclerosis will cause strokes and/or seizures. You need to control his diet closely. He needs a lean diet with no bad fats and very little simple carbohydrates. Lots of protein and vegetables. Moderate exercise is very important.
I wonder why your vets have not recommended medication for atherosclerosis? This disease appears in almost all birds after middle age and into old age. I have owned three macaws, all adults when I got them, and all three had atherosclerosis. My Jasper (deceased) was 6 1/2 when I got her and had sever atherosclerosis and heart disease when I got her. The conditions were caused by a horrible diet for the first 6 years of her life.
Please read;
Even though we intellectually grasp the idea that caged birds rarely show signs of progressive disease before they completely decompensate, we have been hopelessly slow to acknowledge the risks of...
www.forthebirdsdvm.com
Posts about atherosclerosis in parrots written by Pamela Clark, CPBC
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