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Health & Nutrition
Rectal Bleeding on a calf
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<blockquote data-quote="Lucky_P" data-source="post: 1505732" data-attributes="member: 12607"><p>ALL cattle (and other ruminants, for that matter) have coccidia at some point in their lives... whether or not they develop clinical disease is another matter. </p><p>Sulfas are only potentially an issue in a dehydrated animal; otherwise, I see no problem with repeated treatment. </p><p>I've only ever seen one slide from an animal with sulfa drug kidney damage, and it was OLD case material, retained for teaching purposes. Otherwise, I never saw it in nearly 40 yrs of veterinary practice and diagnostic pathology.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Lucky_P, post: 1505732, member: 12607"] ALL cattle (and other ruminants, for that matter) have coccidia at some point in their lives... whether or not they develop clinical disease is another matter. Sulfas are only potentially an issue in a dehydrated animal; otherwise, I see no problem with repeated treatment. I've only ever seen one slide from an animal with sulfa drug kidney damage, and it was OLD case material, retained for teaching purposes. Otherwise, I never saw it in nearly 40 yrs of veterinary practice and diagnostic pathology. [/QUOTE]
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Rectal Bleeding on a calf
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