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Cattle Boards
Breeding / Calving Issues
Bladder infection: cautionary tale
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<blockquote data-quote="Putangitangi" data-source="post: 1196541" data-attributes="member: 5956"><p>You can be as careful as possible, but you're still working in the dark! </p><p></p><p>Lucky_P, I've continued thinking about your pressure necrosis theory and it fits best for me with what happened and how things developed. The calf was pretty much in one place for the several hours it wasn't being born. In a similar case a few days before, the calf came out and developed a significant swelling over one eye, which took a week to go down. He'd obviously been pressed in one place for some time. We don't get to see what the insides of their mothers look like under similar pressure - well, not usually. There are pictures, if anyone wants to see them.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Putangitangi, post: 1196541, member: 5956"] You can be as careful as possible, but you're still working in the dark! Lucky_P, I've continued thinking about your pressure necrosis theory and it fits best for me with what happened and how things developed. The calf was pretty much in one place for the several hours it wasn't being born. In a similar case a few days before, the calf came out and developed a significant swelling over one eye, which took a week to go down. He'd obviously been pressed in one place for some time. We don't get to see what the insides of their mothers look like under similar pressure - well, not usually. There are pictures, if anyone wants to see them. [/QUOTE]
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Bladder infection: cautionary tale
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