milkmaid":7jjzk8sj said:
I believe the risk of abortion using sodium iodide IV is highest in late gestation; with her only being 4 months bred you may be okay. I had a cow with lumpy jaw last year and I chose to wait until she calved before IV'ing her; the calf was worth more to me than the cow was. To the best of my knowledge, abortions are due to the high level of iodine in the bloodstream which may possibly cause irritation to the placental attachments, causing the cow to slip the calf. Giving iodine IV or orally still results in the same condition = high iodine levels in the blood, which is what you need to treat wooden tongue. I don't think you'd avoid the abortion risk by giving it orally. LuckyP - if you read this - have any thoughts on the matter?
You could always try oxytetracycline IV first and if you don't see a response in 24-48 hours then use iodine - I don't know of any other treatments but oxytet and iodine for wooden tongue, and unfortunately if the cow doesn't eat she'll die. Not like lumpy jaw where you can wait until she calves before treating her.
Cow acts fine otherwise? rabies is always a concern when you go sticking your hand into a cow's mouth.
I'm not familiar with IV, nor set-up for it, so it's not an option. Some of the fellows on Ranchers, went the organic iodide oral route and noticed that it didn't have the incidence of abortions that IV iodine did.
I put her on Oxytet LP today for the next 5 days. Gave her a teaspoon of organic iodide, although I may up the amount tomorrow. Base of the tongue seems swollen (flinched when I applied a little pressure to that area) and while eating some soft grass hay that I gave her in isolation, you can see as she chews that she is biting her tongue.
The first third of the tongue looks relatively normal, and I don't smell anything foul about her breath.
I though of rabies initially, but based on her behaviour, it would have to be the paralytic form (not furious), and according to Merck's, paralytic form hosts live only a few hours. Also, no swelling of the tongue in rabies, only paralysis.
She ate a bit of soft hay and I saw her urinate, so everything must be working properly still. I think I may have caught it early enough. I snapped a couple pics of her in the chute today, will post in a bit. :cowboy: