AClark
Loving the herd life
We had a really bad day yesterday. Ruby (older Boer doe) was down. She looked like maybe she was bloating, but it wasn't really bad looking yet and not taunt feeling. I dragged her as far as I could, but I found out that while she doesn't look it, she's at least 200 lbs. DH came home for lunch and we lifted her into the wheel barrow and put her in the barn so I could watch her better.
Drenched her (good ole baking soda) and gave her some pepto. She acted kind of depressed but would get up, drink, poop, etc.
Later in the afternoon she's down on her brisket, refused to get up, or eat, and is groaning. I called the vet and he walked me through tubing her stomach. No air, no anything out of the tube and she looks huge, but it feels like a water bed. Vet is already on an emergency call and won't be at the office until late, but we head down and wait for him. 8:30 PM he finally gets to the office, and this is bad news.
Hydrops uteri. Something went wrong with her pregnancy and her uterus filled with fluid. It mimics signs of pregnancy toxemia. There are no options with treatment here, the pregnancy has to be terminated. He dosed her with dexamethasone, and sent home a big syringe of it for me to give today. His prognosis was not good, she wasn't expected to make it through the night. By this time she is limp and groaning.
I woke up at 4:30 this morning and first thought was stressing over her. I didn't want to go check because I figured she had died on me. She has been up and moved around some and isn't groaning in agony anymore. She looks a lot better.
Definitely not out of the woods, we have to watch for what she passes from her pregnancy. I have the concern that it might be something like a water baby and hard for her to pass, but so far, nothing.
I figured this would be something good to post about for education sake. I had never heard of this issue, and this was the first goat my vet has seen with it.
While bloat is serious, this is absolutely deadly if not attended to, and it really looks so much like bloat with the distension, pain, not eating, etc. I was racking my brain trying to think how she would have bloated when I don't feed grain, she was in a dry lot with nothing but free fed hay and regular pelleted ration, and there's no green ANYTHING here for her to have eaten.
Here's an article on it for more information: https://books.google.com/books?id=f...q0Q6AEIazAI#v=onepage&q=hydrops uteri&f=false
Drenched her (good ole baking soda) and gave her some pepto. She acted kind of depressed but would get up, drink, poop, etc.
Later in the afternoon she's down on her brisket, refused to get up, or eat, and is groaning. I called the vet and he walked me through tubing her stomach. No air, no anything out of the tube and she looks huge, but it feels like a water bed. Vet is already on an emergency call and won't be at the office until late, but we head down and wait for him. 8:30 PM he finally gets to the office, and this is bad news.
Hydrops uteri. Something went wrong with her pregnancy and her uterus filled with fluid. It mimics signs of pregnancy toxemia. There are no options with treatment here, the pregnancy has to be terminated. He dosed her with dexamethasone, and sent home a big syringe of it for me to give today. His prognosis was not good, she wasn't expected to make it through the night. By this time she is limp and groaning.
I woke up at 4:30 this morning and first thought was stressing over her. I didn't want to go check because I figured she had died on me. She has been up and moved around some and isn't groaning in agony anymore. She looks a lot better.
Definitely not out of the woods, we have to watch for what she passes from her pregnancy. I have the concern that it might be something like a water baby and hard for her to pass, but so far, nothing.
I figured this would be something good to post about for education sake. I had never heard of this issue, and this was the first goat my vet has seen with it.
While bloat is serious, this is absolutely deadly if not attended to, and it really looks so much like bloat with the distension, pain, not eating, etc. I was racking my brain trying to think how she would have bloated when I don't feed grain, she was in a dry lot with nothing but free fed hay and regular pelleted ration, and there's no green ANYTHING here for her to have eaten.
Here's an article on it for more information: https://books.google.com/books?id=f...q0Q6AEIazAI#v=onepage&q=hydrops uteri&f=false