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PERSISTENT scours in bottle calves
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<blockquote data-quote="raykour" data-source="post: 1140422" data-attributes="member: 16801"><p>I have 3 bottle calves, 1 2 weeks old, 1 3 weeks old, and 1 10 days old.</p><p></p><p>They have had PERSISTENT scours for over a week. I mean just shooting yellow water. I have had scours problems before but never like this. I just can't keep them ahead, hydration wise. One of them has mild temperature, so I started treating her with oxytetracyline. I am also giving them anti-diarrheal (pepto), probiotics, and an anti-diarrheal bolus (has pectin and stuff like that in it to firm things up) The 2 without the temperature have a decent appetite. The one with the little fever is a smaller calf, but she still isn't getting enough in my opinion...I can get her to suck abut 6 pints a day. For feed, I am giving them Arrest, which is formula for stressed calves in addition to milk. The healthier 2 thus are consuming 2 gallons each day (1 gallon milk, 1 gallon Arrest) but this is STILL not making up for the deficit. Yesterday morning, one was so dehydrated he was hypothermic and I had to warm him and tube him.....the previous Friday we had to put an IV in him. I am just at my wits end trying to figure out why these calves won't start to improve at all. </p><p></p><p>My vet has seen them and gave me a bicarb/dextrose solution to syringe feed them to stave away acidosis. It was the vets feeling this did not need to be treated with antibiotics, although we treated one with penicillin (because in the beginning I thought he was toxic because he was bloating as well) and he is just the same as the other two. I'm just terribly frustrated as I spend hours each day nursing these calves!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="raykour, post: 1140422, member: 16801"] I have 3 bottle calves, 1 2 weeks old, 1 3 weeks old, and 1 10 days old. They have had PERSISTENT scours for over a week. I mean just shooting yellow water. I have had scours problems before but never like this. I just can't keep them ahead, hydration wise. One of them has mild temperature, so I started treating her with oxytetracyline. I am also giving them anti-diarrheal (pepto), probiotics, and an anti-diarrheal bolus (has pectin and stuff like that in it to firm things up) The 2 without the temperature have a decent appetite. The one with the little fever is a smaller calf, but she still isn't getting enough in my opinion...I can get her to suck abut 6 pints a day. For feed, I am giving them Arrest, which is formula for stressed calves in addition to milk. The healthier 2 thus are consuming 2 gallons each day (1 gallon milk, 1 gallon Arrest) but this is STILL not making up for the deficit. Yesterday morning, one was so dehydrated he was hypothermic and I had to warm him and tube him.....the previous Friday we had to put an IV in him. I am just at my wits end trying to figure out why these calves won't start to improve at all. My vet has seen them and gave me a bicarb/dextrose solution to syringe feed them to stave away acidosis. It was the vets feeling this did not need to be treated with antibiotics, although we treated one with penicillin (because in the beginning I thought he was toxic because he was bloating as well) and he is just the same as the other two. I'm just terribly frustrated as I spend hours each day nursing these calves! [/QUOTE]
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