VX40 – Ruminal Milk Drinker – Acute
Synonyms
No known synonym
Name of the disease in English
Ruminal dinker-Indigestion in calves fed milk replacers
The disease in brief
A poorly closing esophageal gutter causes milk to accumulate and ferment in the rumen, leading to indigestion. This problem occurs in calves that are bucket fed, particularly on milk replacer. It is a major problem for calf producers.
butchers called "label", that is to say those who raise beef calves or crossbreeds with cow's milk distributed by the bucket. These specialized breeders are generally very familiar with the problem, its detection, its treatment and its prevention. The acute form of the disease is a bloating which hides a problem of indigestion with a chronic tendency.
Clinic & diagnosis
In its acute form it is a rumen bloat. It can manifest pain, teeth grinding, show colic. When the problem sets in it leads to poor growth, clayey feces with a rancid odor, distension of the left flank and succussion of the flank brings about liquid noises. A gastric tube allows the emptying of a putrid odor liquid.
Typical sign of the disease
No description
Pictures
See below
Diagnostic formulas
No description
Differential diagnosis
-Abomasum meteorization N360
- Dilation of the abomasum on the right side of the calf
Confirm a suspicion?
Passing a gastric tube allows the draining of a putrid smelling liquid.
Prognosis and treatment
Treatment of bloating should be followed by rehabilitation of the calf:
1-Pass a gastric tube to empty the rumen of its putrefied contents, rinse with water 2 to 3 times until obtaining a rinse water almost without odor; then, add anti-infectives (antibiotics or sulfonamides used against common diarrhea) in the last rinse water which is
left in the stomach.
2- Re-educate the calf to drink towards the abomasum: The calf is deprived of milk for 1 day. It only receives water. Then resume drinking from
small quantities with a nipple bucket attached under the bottom of the bucket.
Prevention
To avoid this problem:
– Put a pacifier in the bottom of the usual buckets.
– Quickly identify calves that have difficulty digesting milk drunk from a bucket “with their heads down”.
– Raise the buckets and make the calves suck with their “heads in the air”.
References
Veterinary Medicine-Pocket companion -9th Edition BLOOD DC-page 97