Help new calf - Rickets??

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Kathy Millar
Posts: 725
Joined: Wed May 19, 2004 4:53 pm
Location: Vancouver Island, BC, Canada

Post by Kathy Millar »

I had a calf born this morning and it is really knock-kneed. Viewed from the side, the front legs bend forward from the knee down. It can walk but is pretty tipsy. Is this a form of rickets? The knees do not appear swollen. Is there something that can be done? I feel terrible looking at her!

Kathy :(
Kathy
Home Farm, Vancouver Island, Canada
Penny
Posts: 400
Joined: Sun May 09, 2004 9:41 pm

Post by Penny »

Don't worry, this can happen sometime. The legs should soon get their act together and straighten up!
hazel clarke
Posts: 35
Joined: Fri Oct 28, 2005 12:40 pm

Post by hazel clarke »

Have also had this happen and it does sort itself out in the end! My vet suggested at the time that I put mum and calf into a small area so the baby had not too far to walk for food!
Good luck
Hazel
moomin
Posts: 377
Joined: Tue Mar 30, 2004 7:36 am
Location: Dover, kent

Post by moomin »

Hazel and Penny are right. She has just been lying that way in uteri. good idea to keep them restricted for a few days. She will soon straighten up.
Kathy Millar
Posts: 725
Joined: Wed May 19, 2004 4:53 pm
Location: Vancouver Island, BC, Canada

Post by Kathy Millar »

Thank you so much for the reassurance. I am guilty of making her walk a few hundred feet to get her into a nicer paddock but it is quite small and she has already taken advantage of the lovely cool shade. You are right, the legs are straightening up and she had a little gallop tonight, tail in the air. I now have yet another bit of experience under my belt!

Kathy :D
Kathy
Home Farm, Vancouver Island, Canada
Duncan MacIntyre
Posts: 2372
Joined: Tue Mar 30, 2004 12:38 am
Location: Isle of Bute, Scotland, UK

Post by Duncan MacIntyre »

It sounds as if this calf has a degree of shortening of the flexor tendons in the front legs, not uncommon in dairy calves of conventional breeds. It is usually assumed that if the calf can get the tips of its toes on the ground by itself then in time the leg will straighten. If the shortening is so severe that the toes cannot touch the ground it is sometimes necessary to splint the leg for a time, but the majority do right themselves.
In Scotland we also see a congential but not inherited condition with bending and twisting of front legs in beef suckler calves out of cows fed on silage. It can affect a significant proportion of calves in a herd in the same season and the causal factors are not well understood. Again a large proportion of affected ones do improve and only a small number are ever a really serious problem. I think it unlikely that any Dexter breeders will see this problem.

Duncan
Duncan MacIntyre
Burnside Dexters 00316
Burnside
Ascog
Isle of Bute
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