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Cattle Boards
Health & Nutrition
Why do some vaccs bumps not go away?
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<blockquote data-quote="KNERSIE" data-source="post: 691498" data-attributes="member: 4353"><p>Very good answer, your hands on experience is showing.</p><p></p><p>Clostridal vaccines and pink eye vaccines seems to be the worst for leaving bumps, apart from rubbing the injection site hard to spread the fluid a little, making sure your equipment is sterilised and that you are indeed sub qutaneous before injecting, there is little more you can do. I've heard that alternating ice packs with heat packs will also reduce the reaction, but that is really only practical in the case of show animals. I've never seen Ivomec leaving bumps, but Pro-inject Yellow, an injectable dewormer and fluke remedy will leave a nasty reaction in some while it don't affect others at all.</p><p></p><p>All injection bumps will eventually go away, some may take months, though. It would still be good practice to inject your show cattle on the left side of the neck and not the right side so your body will hide the injection bumps to a degree.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="KNERSIE, post: 691498, member: 4353"] Very good answer, your hands on experience is showing. Clostridal vaccines and pink eye vaccines seems to be the worst for leaving bumps, apart from rubbing the injection site hard to spread the fluid a little, making sure your equipment is sterilised and that you are indeed sub qutaneous before injecting, there is little more you can do. I've heard that alternating ice packs with heat packs will also reduce the reaction, but that is really only practical in the case of show animals. I've never seen Ivomec leaving bumps, but Pro-inject Yellow, an injectable dewormer and fluke remedy will leave a nasty reaction in some while it don't affect others at all. All injection bumps will eventually go away, some may take months, though. It would still be good practice to inject your show cattle on the left side of the neck and not the right side so your body will hide the injection bumps to a degree. [/QUOTE]
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Why do some vaccs bumps not go away?
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