February 2018 Issue

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Subscribe FREE now! Monthly issues with new articles and other educational information on meat goat health, nutrition, and management written by Suzanne W. Gasparotto of Onion Creek Ranch and Pat Cotten of Bending Tree Ranch. In all cases, it is your responsibility to obtain veterinary services and advice before using any of the information provided in these articles. Neither Suzanne Gasparotto nor Pat Cotten are veterinarians. None of the contributors to this website will be held responsible for the use of any information contained herein.

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Please contact Suzanne W. Gasparotto at 324-344-5775 or email at onioncreek@tennesseemeatgoats.com

HEALTH PROBLEMS OF PREGNANT & LACTATING DOES

Familiarize yourself with the many possible  problems that can affect pregnant and lactating does.    I have detailed articles on each of these topics and how I handle them on the Articles page at www.tennesseemeatgoats.com   and in MeatGoatMania.

Worms:  The single biggest  health problem with all goats in general and pregnant does in particular  is Haemonchus contortus (barberpole worm) infestation.   Everything  in the goat's health revolves around  controlling the load of blood-sucking stomach worms.   Do fecal counts  using an MSK-01  microscope  on random goats  at least once each month.  Keep the population density low; no amount of deworming can overcome the worm load that comes from over-crowding.

Nutritional Deficiencies:    Improper feeding, either too much or too little or the wrong formulation.   A fat doe can produce kids too big to be delivered easily.  Too much fat around the doe's heart, lungs, liver, and kidneys   causes problems.  Layers of fat around her uterus restrict  its ability to expand as the fetuses grow.   On the other hand, too little or wrong  nutrition means she cannot successfully grow her fetuses in utero.   Weak labor can result from nutritional deficiencies.   Improper feeding causes the pregnancy diseases Ketosis, Pregnancy Toxemia, and Hypocalcemia.  Incorrect feeding is probably the most common cause of abortions.  The hardest thing to get right when raising goats in any managed herd is proper nutrition.

Mastitis:    Bacteria enter the udder through the teat orifice, infecting the udder and affecting her ability to produce milk. If  any milk comes out, it will be stringy, chunky, or blood-tainted.    The outside of the udder can be hot (fever  and infection are  present) or cold (udder is dead).  Mastitis can develop at any time during the pregnancy,  during lactation,  or in an open (unbred) doe.   Mastitis tends to be chronic (recurring).   Visual examination is inadequate; you must "hands on" the udder.

Congested Udder:    The udder may initially seem mastitic, but it is really over-filled, tight, and so uncomfortable that the dam won't let the newborns  nurse.   A congested udder isn't infected.   Hot compresses and other treatments should allow milk to come out.  If it is congested and not mastitic, the milk will be good.   You must put your hands on and try to milk out the udder to diagnose the problem properly.  Visual evaluation is misleading.

No Milk/Udder Not Filled:   Milk let-down hasn't occurred.    This can be hormonal or nutritional.    Prescription Oxytocin injectable may be appropriate.

Retained Placenta:    A placenta is not considered "retained" for 24 hours after birth.  Do not pull the afterbirth out of the doe; she must pass this herself.   Pulling can result in internal tearing that can cause her to bleed out and die.  Prescription Oxytocin injectable may be used.

Abortions:    Abortions have many possible causes -- heavy worm load, bacterial  or viral  infections, poor nutrition, certain medications  and  dewormers, malformation or interrupted development of the fetus (spontaneous abortion), physical injuries.     Sudden onset of multiple abortions is  an "abortion storm."   Abortion diseases include but are not limited to chlamydia, herpes,  neospora canum, toxoplasmosis, listeriosis, salmonellosis, Q fever, akabane virus, leptospirosis, and campylobacterosis.   Some  diseases are zoonotic (humans can catch them).   Dewormers Valbazen, Synanthic, and Levamisole can cause abortions at certain stages of pregnancy.   Abortion vaccines for other species (including sheep) do not work with goats.

Failure to Deliver Kids:   The doe's water has broken but kids aren't coming out.  Numerous possible scenarios include improperly positioned kids, dead kids, weak labor, cervix not dilated. Figure out what is wrong and take appropriate action; read my articles on these conditions.

Delivers Single Kid But Normally Produces Multiple Kids:    If I have a doe that   normally delivers twins or triplets and she has only one kid, I glove up and go inside to find out if there are more kids.  If the sac has broken, I pull the kids.   You have to have some experience and history with your does and know them  to understand when this action should be taken.

Prolapses:    If either the vagina or the rectum is outside the body, the goat  has prolapsed.   Prolapses in pregnant does usually happen during the final 30 days of pregnancy, as the kids are growing rapidly.   Most  fetal development  occurs in the last 30 days of gestation.   Rectal prolapses are usually the result of the doe's being too fat  (over-feeding).   Vaginal prolapses are sometimes hereditary and, if so, might be able to be bred out  by mating the doe with an unrelated buck whose female offspring do not prolapse.  In my herd, does that prolapse more than once are sold for  slaughter.

Periparturient Edema:    Appears late in pregnancy in does  heavy with multiple kids.   Fluid (edema) builds up in the lower legs. Often related to a heavy worm load.   There is no cure - only supportive care until the doe delivers the kids, at which time it should disappear if the worm load has been addressed.

False Pregnancy:   A doe can go through a five-month pregnancy, develop an udder full of milk, have her water break, and deliver nothing but fluid.   Also known as a cloud-burst pregnancy.   Not common  but  occurs  occasionally.

Superfetation:   A doe can be bred on two heat cycles and even by two different bucks, delivering kids and again in 21 days.   Also not common.

Dystocia:     This term describes the entire range of kidding difficulties, including improper/abnormal presentation of kids in the birth canal that require   manual assistance.  Dead kid in front of live kid is only one example of Dystocia.

Metritis:    Uterine infection.

Pyometra:    Pus in the uterus.

Ringwomb:    Failure of cervix to dilate.

Uterine Torsion:     Twisted uterus.  Vet assistance required.

Pregnancy Diseases:      Pregnancy Toxemia   can occur within the last six weeks of pregnancy and is caused either by underfeeding (starvation toxemia equals an  energy shortage) or overfeeding. A doe's nutritional balance is especially critical during this timeframe. Feeding too much grain or feeding the wrong kinds of grain is usually the culprit. During the last weeks of pregnancy, a doe has little room in her body for lots of grain, fast-growing fetuses, and the amount of roughage (grass hay) vital for proper rumen function.   Growing fetuses take up abdominal space, reducing the size of the rumen.   A goat goes off-feed when it doesn't get enough roughage. Huge stores of body fat plus a uterus full of fetuses set the stage for Pregnancy Toxemia. Symptoms of Pregnancy Toxemia include off-feed, dull eyes, slow moving, general weakness, tremors, teeth grinding, stargazing, leg swelling, and coma. When fetuses die, toxemia results from the decaying bodies inside the doe and she also dies. All of this happens because of improper feeding.

Ketosis:   Symptoms  similar to Pregnancy Toxemia  that   occur very close to kidding or once kidding has taken place. If the pregnant female does not receive adequate amounts of proper nutrition to feed both herself and her unborn kids, when she begins the kidding process or has just completed kidding, her body will draw upon stored fat reserves in order to produce milk to feed her babies.    Her own body tissues begin to go into starvation mode and deadly ketones are released as by-products of this process. A quick way to diagnose Ketosis: a doe with sweet-smelling urine is ketotic.    A ketotic doe's urine will turn purple when added to KetoCheck powder.   Jeffers carries this product.   Tip: A goat urinates and then defecates when it first stands after having been in a sitting position for some time.

Hypocalcemia:   "Milk Fever" is not  fever  but a calcium imbalance in the doe's body.  Hypocalcemia occurs near  kidding time.   She will become uninterested in eating (go off-feed), may be mildly bloated or constipated, have a cold dry mouth, difficulty walking and/or rising from a sitting position, sub-normal body temperature (under 100*F),  cold rear legs and drag them, and may have weak labor contractions. Sometimes the only symptom is hind-leg dragging. Rear body parts feel cold to the touch.   Hypocalcemia is a complex process involving hormonal changes that occur as the doe's body mobilizes calcium in the production of milk. Feeds rich in calcium, as well as alfalfa and peanut (legume) hay, are believed to be the culprits. These products contain calcium in excess of what the doe needs at kidding time. This excess calcium sets off a chain reaction, causing calcium to be deposited in the doe's bones when her body needs to be releasing it from the bones for milk production. Hypocalcemia is a failure of the body's system to  mobilize calcium properly.    It is not  a deficiency of calcium reserves.

Don't feed hay (or feed)  high in calcium during the last 30 days of pregnancy.    After the doe has delivered and is nursing her kids, legume hay (alfalfa and peanut hay) is  fine to feed.

The variety and complexity of problems that pregnant and lactating does can experience should make it clear to you that appropriate supplies and medications should be on hand at least 60 days before the first doe is scheduled to go into labor. Not every problem can be solved nor every kid or doe saved, but being prepared will make a huge difference in whether or not you are successful in your goat-raising business.

Suzanne W. Gasparotto, Onion Creek Ranch, Texas             2/1/18

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