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Cattle Boards
Health & Nutrition
Bad reaction to sedation
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<blockquote data-quote="Lucky_P" data-source="post: 1595165" data-attributes="member: 12607"><p>It's not necessarily done that way. </p><p>I almost never used Rompun in cattle unless I had to shoot 'em with the tranquilizer gun. </p><p>If I had to 'sedate' one for a procedure like a C-section or foot trim... I used straight ketamine IV; nothing else. They went down fast, stayed down for 30 to 45 minutes max with no depression, and got up with minimal wobbliness pretty quickly. </p><p>I could do a C-section, skin-to-skin, by about the time they started wiggling/kicking... would finish suturing, untie them and get out of the way, 'cause they were getting up as soon as the ropes were off. </p><p>No worries about cardiac/respiratory depression, bloating, etc.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Lucky_P, post: 1595165, member: 12607"] It's not necessarily done that way. I almost never used Rompun in cattle unless I had to shoot 'em with the tranquilizer gun. If I had to 'sedate' one for a procedure like a C-section or foot trim... I used straight ketamine IV; nothing else. They went down fast, stayed down for 30 to 45 minutes max with no depression, and got up with minimal wobbliness pretty quickly. I could do a C-section, skin-to-skin, by about the time they started wiggling/kicking... would finish suturing, untie them and get out of the way, 'cause they were getting up as soon as the ropes were off. No worries about cardiac/respiratory depression, bloating, etc. [/QUOTE]
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