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Breeding / Calving Issues
Sudden death in 2 week old calf
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<blockquote data-quote="4luvofcattle" data-source="post: 1006760" data-attributes="member: 20207"><p>Need some possible ideas, if anyone has them. I went through our modest cow herd of 30 after I got home from work. I checked the three cows we have left to calve and looked over all of the calves (20 heifers and only 6 bulls -- lost one heifer born backwards early in the season). Calves appeared to be fine laying around soaking up the sun in the 50 degree weather or running around the pen with their tails up. So I walked to the shed to get the 3 buckets of grain/mineral mix to feed in the bunks and called for the cows to come to the bunks. I dumped the pails and when I got to the last pail, I noticed a calf sprawled out by the bunk gasping for air. It was a calf I had seen just 5 minutes earlier curled up comfortably on the corn stalk pile. (I know this calf because the mom is so protective that I have to make sure I know where her calf and the cow is all of the time.) I called for my daughter to help and by the time she got there (30 seconds), the calf would not move for 10 seconds and then sprawl out, gasping for air. We were able to pull the calf out of the pen immediately and I checked the throat for anything caught in it, but nothing and the calf never took another breath. </p><p>My husband had seen it nurse the night before, so it was a complete shock that anything was wrong with it. We had the vet come and post it about an hour later and he found nothing really wrong with it. We thought maybe a cow kicked it and broke a rib and punctured a lung or kicked it in the head, but no broken ribs and now signs of muddy hoof prints (we just had 1 inch of rain, so the cows' legs are muddy). The only thing that look abnormal was that the trachea was "pale" which could mean she was losing blood somewhere. There was no signs of it in the body cavity. He did not look at the brain (he said he wasn't "good" at it, so it wouldn't show anything.) </p><p>So I guess I am looking for some ideas. Maybe it was a broken vessel from head trauma earlier in the week, maybe an aneurysm in the brain? I hope it it is one of those two and not a contagious sickness to pass on to the remaining 25 calves. </p><p>Our cows are feed with an alfalfa/cornstalk/wet cake mix in a mixer wagon and then are give their minerals (both force feed and lick tubs - my husband is a feed salesman, so he has them on a balanced diet). Any ideas or unfortunate experiences??</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="4luvofcattle, post: 1006760, member: 20207"] Need some possible ideas, if anyone has them. I went through our modest cow herd of 30 after I got home from work. I checked the three cows we have left to calve and looked over all of the calves (20 heifers and only 6 bulls -- lost one heifer born backwards early in the season). Calves appeared to be fine laying around soaking up the sun in the 50 degree weather or running around the pen with their tails up. So I walked to the shed to get the 3 buckets of grain/mineral mix to feed in the bunks and called for the cows to come to the bunks. I dumped the pails and when I got to the last pail, I noticed a calf sprawled out by the bunk gasping for air. It was a calf I had seen just 5 minutes earlier curled up comfortably on the corn stalk pile. (I know this calf because the mom is so protective that I have to make sure I know where her calf and the cow is all of the time.) I called for my daughter to help and by the time she got there (30 seconds), the calf would not move for 10 seconds and then sprawl out, gasping for air. We were able to pull the calf out of the pen immediately and I checked the throat for anything caught in it, but nothing and the calf never took another breath. My husband had seen it nurse the night before, so it was a complete shock that anything was wrong with it. We had the vet come and post it about an hour later and he found nothing really wrong with it. We thought maybe a cow kicked it and broke a rib and punctured a lung or kicked it in the head, but no broken ribs and now signs of muddy hoof prints (we just had 1 inch of rain, so the cows' legs are muddy). The only thing that look abnormal was that the trachea was "pale" which could mean she was losing blood somewhere. There was no signs of it in the body cavity. He did not look at the brain (he said he wasn't "good" at it, so it wouldn't show anything.) So I guess I am looking for some ideas. Maybe it was a broken vessel from head trauma earlier in the week, maybe an aneurysm in the brain? I hope it it is one of those two and not a contagious sickness to pass on to the remaining 25 calves. Our cows are feed with an alfalfa/cornstalk/wet cake mix in a mixer wagon and then are give their minerals (both force feed and lick tubs - my husband is a feed salesman, so he has them on a balanced diet). Any ideas or unfortunate experiences?? [/QUOTE]
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Sudden death in 2 week old calf
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