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Cattle Boards
Health & Nutrition
Vet is stumped and so are we
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<blockquote data-quote="KNERSIE" data-source="post: 345377" data-attributes="member: 4353"><p>Did you take the temperatures of the sick cows?</p><p></p><p>This sounds typical of a redwater outbreak, but not sure if you even get it in the USA. If this happened on my farm I would start looking at redwater and then look further.</p><p></p><p>Typical symptoms would be high fever, ears drooping, going off feed, hard breathing, anaemic, in the advanced stages urine turns red and bloody and nervous symptoms shows just before death. The abortions would be typical after the high fever.</p><p></p><p>The older animals are usually affected worse and the ones that survive often suffers from ruminal paralysis.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="KNERSIE, post: 345377, member: 4353"] Did you take the temperatures of the sick cows? This sounds typical of a redwater outbreak, but not sure if you even get it in the USA. If this happened on my farm I would start looking at redwater and then look further. Typical symptoms would be high fever, ears drooping, going off feed, hard breathing, anaemic, in the advanced stages urine turns red and bloody and nervous symptoms shows just before death. The abortions would be typical after the high fever. The older animals are usually affected worse and the ones that survive often suffers from ruminal paralysis. [/QUOTE]
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Vet is stumped and so are we
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