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YOUTH &
AGRICULTURE              HEALTH    ECONOMY   ENVIRONMENT   ENERGY   COMMUNITIES
              FAMILIES
                                                                                  P. P. P. P. P.-P. P.


                                                                                         To minimize problems:
               Care of Neonatal Lambs and Kids

                             Dr.
                             Dr Susan Kerr                                         Breeding Feeding        Vaccinating Facilities Lambing
                         WSU-Klickitat Co. Extension




          BE PREPARED!                                                            GOALS

       • Know breeding dates
                                                                                         • Have doe/ewe raise 1+ offspring with
       • Observe dams closely at least 2x/day for
         those close to labor                                                              minimal assistance (#2 and 3 make you $$)
       • Have medications up-to-date and on hand
                              p                                                          • No bummers
       • Have equipment gathered and disinfected                                         • May need to target small triplets for
       • Have frozen colostrum available                                                   supplementation
       • Have adequate facilities ready                                                  • Fewer chores = more sanity (or delayed
       • Have a good late pregnancy nutritional                                            insanity and longer time as a producer...)
         program in place
       • Crutch and clip udders if necessary




 NEONATAL CARE                                                                    NEONATES’ NEEDS

   •   Clip
                                                                                         • ENVIRONMENT: Dry, clean, (warm)
   •   Dip
                                                                                         • NUTRITION: Colostrum ASAP
   •   (Strip)
                                                                                         • HEALTH: Vit E/Se, navel care, +/- anti-toxins
   •     p
       Sip
   •   Keep warm and dry: > 35°F,
       >60°F, >75°F?

   Hypothermia is a huge concern;
     only born with enough “brown fat”
     to maintain body temperature for
     5 hours max
                                                    Photo from www.ehow.com                  Photo from www.sheep101.info/201/newborns.html




                                                                                                                                              1
SPECIAL CONCERNS                                                        DAY 1, 0-1 HOURS



•   Starvation
•   Hypothermia                                                         • Colostrum
•   Scours                                                              • Vit E/S l i
                                                                              E/Selenium
•   Pneumonia                                                           • Navel care
•   Failure to thrive                                                     (clip and dip)
•   Meconium impaction                                                  • Bonding



                 Photo from www.sheepandgoat.com/news/Spring2007.html                     Photo from www.sheep101.info/201/newborns.html




DAY 1, 1-6 HOURS                                                        DAY 1, 6-24 HOURS


       •   Standing                                                            • Increasingly active
       •   Nursing successfully                                                • Warm mouth
       •     y
           Dry                                                                 •          y
                                                                                 Full belly
       •   Warm mouth                                                          • Has passed feces
       •   Napping                                                             • Sleep, wake, stretch, nurse, wag tail, look
       •   Quiet (not crying excessively)                                        around, sleep
       •   Bonding (+/- individual pens)                                       • Bonding




DAY 3 +                                                                 PROTECT FROM:

                                                                           •   Drowning
    • Small groups of same-age pairs in small area                         •   Electrocution
    • Process those off to a good start (band, ID,                         •   Barn fires
      disbud if possible)                                                  •   Drafts
    • Do not put young onto area that previously                           •   Crushing
      housed older (Sandhills Calving System)                              •   Dogs/predators
    • Eventually combine small groups into single                          •   Strangulation
      large management group                                               •   Fractures
                                                                                                                 http://ucanr.org
                                                                           •   Lacerations




                                                                                                                                           2
IDENTIFYING BUMMERS/ORPHANS/POOR DO-ERS                                               CAUSES OF “ORPHANING”

                                                                                        • Death of dam
                                                                                        • Rejection by dam (behavior, interference,
    •   Gaunt, hunched-up twin or triplet any age
                                                                                          neonate’s health, twins, etc.)
    •   Weak, recumbent neonate, esp. <12 hrs.                                          • Dam’s health issues (e.g. no milk)
    •   Evidence of scours or pneumonia
        E id       f                    i                                               • Neonate health: hypoxia, prematurity, WMD...
    •   Dirty head (stealing milk)                                                      • Special health situations (e.g. CAE/OPP)
                                                                                        • High lambing/kidding percentages
        Best outcome = early ID and fostering (<6 hrs)                                  • May choose to bottle feed: friendly kids/lambs,
                                                                                          sell milk, you are nuts and love bottle baby
                                                                                          chores




GRAFTING                                                                              WARM VS. COLD VS. DEAD

• Try it—saves work!                                                                   • If temp below 99°F, neonate poorly responsive
• “Slime method”                                                                         and <5 hours old: dry, warm, tube feed
• Pelt method                                                                          • If temp below 99°F, neonate poorly responsive
                                                                                         and >5 hours old: give warm dextrose IP, warm,
                                                                                               5
• Restraint method
  R      i       h d
                                                                                         tube feed
• Things get easier when
                                                                                       • Both will need continued after care (warmth,
  dam can detect her milk                                                                perhaps more tube feeding)
  smell at baby’s anus
• Tie feet of older graftees
  —struggle and cry like                                                                   Always investigate primary reason neonate was
  newborns                                                                                                cold and/or starving




                                                                                     INTRAPERITONEAL DEXTROSE (HYPOTHERMIC NEONATE)
                                                                                                                             •20% warm dextrose solution at a rate
                                                                                                                             of 10 mL/kg body weight
                                                                                                                             •Calculate amount needed and multiply
                                                                                                                             by 0.4 to determine how much 50%
                                                                                                                             solution to use. Example: 5 kg x 10
                                                                                                                             mL/kg = 50 mL of 20% solution
                                                                                                                               L/k          L f        l ti
                                                                                                                             needed. 50 mL x 0.4 = 20 mL of 50%
                                                                                                                             solution. Draw this amount into syringe.
                                                                                                                             Then draw up the difference (30 mL) in
                                                                                                                             sterile water and warm to body
                                                                                                                             temperature.
                                                                                                                             •Inject into abdominal cavity 1” below
                                                                                                                             and 1” off the midline, pointing needle
                                                                                      Photo from
                                                                                      www.ukvet.co.uk/ukvet/articles/Sheep   toward pelvis using 60 cc syringe and
             From www.omafra.gov.on.ca/english/livestock/sheep/facts/98-089.htm#f6    _hypothermic%20lamb.pdf                20 gauge needle




                                                                                                                                                                        3
WARMING METHODS FOR CHILLED NEONATES                                 COLOSTRUM = LIFE

•   NOT heat lamps                                                   • Source of nutrition (calories from fat and lactose, protein,
                                                                       vitamins, water), laxative, antibodies
•   Warm towels                                                      • Failure of Passive Transfer increases likelihood of illness
•   Jackets (wool ☺ )                                                  and death
                                                                     • Neonate s gut is non selective at birth, initially lets
                                                                       Neonate’s         non-selective
•   Warm bath                                                          antibodies cross intact. Becomes increasingly more
•   Warming box                                                        selective with every passing hour
     – Forced hot air                                                • Target 1: minimum of 10% BW in colostrum in 24 hours.
                                                                       Target 2: 3 oz. per pound of body weight div. into 3-4 meals
     – Elevate baby                                                  • After 48 hours: serum Ig level of 1200 mg/dl protective
     – Monitor                                                       • Colostrum with specific gravity > 1.029 is good quality
     – Remove when mouth                                             • Tube feeding = essential skill; can you do it?
                                    Photo from www.shearwell.co.uk
       warm (temp > 99°F)




PASTEURIZATION AND HEAT TREATMENT                                    FEEDING POST-COLOSTRUM

                                                                     • Milk vs. milk replacer?
    Heat treatment of colostrum: Heat and hold at                    • Bottle vs. Lam-Bar vs. bucket?
     135°F for one hour; stir                                        • Warm vs. cold?
                                                                     • Feed about 3 oz. per pound of body weight daily
    Pasteurization f ilk Heat to 165°F; ti
    P t i ti of milk: H t t 165°F stir                                 di id d i t several f di
                                                                       divided into        l feedings. S ll f
                                                                                                       Small frequentt
                                                                       feedings are safer than fewer, larger meals.
                                                                     • Increase amount fed with increasing body weight
                                                                     • Quality milk replacer has animal-origin fat source
                                                                       and milk protein source; >30% fat, >22% protein
                                                                       (lambs); 20% fat, 26% protein (kids)
                            From www.carpinesupply.com               • Creep feed, hay, water: start within first week;
                                                                       keep clean and fresh




                                                                                                AVERAGE MILK COMPOSITION

MILK CONSUMPTION                                                         100 g.        Sheep      Goat        Cow           Human
             • Weeks 0-2: 1+ quart/day                               Total Solids % 19.3          13          12            12.5
                                                                     Protein %      6             3.6         3.3           1
             • Week 2-3: 1.5 quarts/day
                                                                     Fat %             7          4.1         3.3           4.4
             • Week 3-4: ~2 quarts/day
                                                                     Lactose %         5.4        4.5         4.7           6.9
                                                                     Ash %
                                                                     A h               0.96
                                                                                       0 96       0.82
                                                                                                  0 82        0.72
                                                                                                              0 72          0.20
                                                                                                                            0 20
                                                                     Calcium mg        193        134         119           32
                                                                     Phos. mg          158        111         93            14
                                                                     Vit. A µg         83         44          52            58
                                                                     Vit. D µg         0.18       0.11        0.03          0.04
                                                                     Vit. C µg         Fourth     First       First         Third
                                                                     B-vitamins        First      Third       Second        Fourth
                From www.dairygoatjournal.com




                                                                                                                                      4
KEEPIN’ ‘EM ALIVE                                         HUMPY = NOT HAPPY

• Supplemental heat: coats, heat lamp; prevent
  mobbing/crushing
• Cleanliness and sanitation paramount
  – Boots hands
    Boots,
  – Pens
  – Feeding equipment
• Ventilation, not drafts
• Use good quality milk replacer




CONCERNS: SCOURS AND PNEUMONIA                            SCOURS TREATMENT

Prevention!                                               • Isolate
• Keep pen and feeding equipment clean                    • Keep warm
• Ensure adequate colostrum intake                        • Replace milk feedings with electrolyte feedings
• Do not overcrowd                                        • Do not hold off milk for more than 24 hours
• Feed smaller, more frequent meals vs. few large meals   • Do not give oral antibiotics
• Do not mix ages in pens
                                                          • Give probiotics
• Fresh air, no drafts
                                                          • If severe, may need SQ or IV fluids
• Move groups into new, clean pens; clean and rest
  previous pens                                           • Re-introduce milk in small feedings at least 4
                                                            hours after electrolytes
• Make changes gradually
• Provide supplemental heat to prevent chilling
                                                          • If persists or widespread, consider diagnostic
                                                            work-up




CONTINUED CARE                                            WEANING

                                                              Must be eating solid feed well and be gaining
   • Selenium supplementation                                  weight well before weaning
   • Vaccinations
   • Coccidia p
              prevention/treatment                            Timing: Depends!
   • No urea in diet until rumen fully functional (3          • At around 20# if feeding milk replacer? ($)
     months)
                                                              • After feeding 20-25# of milk replacer?
   • 18-20% CP supplement to 40#, then 12-14%
                                                              • At 3-6-8 weeks? 3-6 months?
   • Weaning

                                                              Method: Abrupt seems best




                                                                                                              5
“THE HUSBAND’S EYE”                                                                    RESOURCES

Signs all is well:
• Lamb/kid stretches after rising, then runs to nurse
• Group not huddled in corner or always under heat lamp
• No excessive bleating or baaing
• Obvious urination and defecation                                                                 www.sheepandgoat.com
• Belly looks full, not gaunt or bloated
• Mouth is pink, warm, moist
• Back not hunched up
• Contented sleep
• Kid/lamb bright, alert, responsive, active, playful
• “Happy attacks”




DISCLAIMER

        The information herein is supplied for educational or reference
purposes only, and with the understanding that no discrimination is intended.
Listing of commercial products implies no endorsement by WSU Extension.
Criticism of products or equipment not listed is neither implied or intended.
        Some medications mentioned herein are available only by prescription,
and other drugs are not labeled for use in goats. These drugs can only be
used on the advice of a licensed veterinarian when a veterinarian-client-
patient relationship exists. Other use violates federal law. Consult your
veterinarian about the extra-label use of medications.
        This information is not intended to replace the advice of your
veterinarian. Consult your veterinarian whenever you have a question about
your animal’s health.

         Extension programs and policies are consistent with federal and state laws
and regulations on nondiscrimination regarding race, color, gender, national origin,
religion, age, disability, and sexual orientation. Evidence of noncompliance may be
reported through your local Extension office.




                                                                                                                          6

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Neonatal care

  • 1. YOUTH & AGRICULTURE HEALTH ECONOMY ENVIRONMENT ENERGY COMMUNITIES FAMILIES P. P. P. P. P.-P. P. To minimize problems: Care of Neonatal Lambs and Kids Dr. Dr Susan Kerr Breeding Feeding Vaccinating Facilities Lambing WSU-Klickitat Co. Extension BE PREPARED! GOALS • Know breeding dates • Have doe/ewe raise 1+ offspring with • Observe dams closely at least 2x/day for those close to labor minimal assistance (#2 and 3 make you $$) • Have medications up-to-date and on hand p • No bummers • Have equipment gathered and disinfected • May need to target small triplets for • Have frozen colostrum available supplementation • Have adequate facilities ready • Fewer chores = more sanity (or delayed • Have a good late pregnancy nutritional insanity and longer time as a producer...) program in place • Crutch and clip udders if necessary NEONATAL CARE NEONATES’ NEEDS • Clip • ENVIRONMENT: Dry, clean, (warm) • Dip • NUTRITION: Colostrum ASAP • (Strip) • HEALTH: Vit E/Se, navel care, +/- anti-toxins • p Sip • Keep warm and dry: > 35°F, >60°F, >75°F? Hypothermia is a huge concern; only born with enough “brown fat” to maintain body temperature for 5 hours max Photo from www.ehow.com Photo from www.sheep101.info/201/newborns.html 1
  • 2. SPECIAL CONCERNS DAY 1, 0-1 HOURS • Starvation • Hypothermia • Colostrum • Scours • Vit E/S l i E/Selenium • Pneumonia • Navel care • Failure to thrive (clip and dip) • Meconium impaction • Bonding Photo from www.sheepandgoat.com/news/Spring2007.html Photo from www.sheep101.info/201/newborns.html DAY 1, 1-6 HOURS DAY 1, 6-24 HOURS • Standing • Increasingly active • Nursing successfully • Warm mouth • y Dry • y Full belly • Warm mouth • Has passed feces • Napping • Sleep, wake, stretch, nurse, wag tail, look • Quiet (not crying excessively) around, sleep • Bonding (+/- individual pens) • Bonding DAY 3 + PROTECT FROM: • Drowning • Small groups of same-age pairs in small area • Electrocution • Process those off to a good start (band, ID, • Barn fires disbud if possible) • Drafts • Do not put young onto area that previously • Crushing housed older (Sandhills Calving System) • Dogs/predators • Eventually combine small groups into single • Strangulation large management group • Fractures http://ucanr.org • Lacerations 2
  • 3. IDENTIFYING BUMMERS/ORPHANS/POOR DO-ERS CAUSES OF “ORPHANING” • Death of dam • Rejection by dam (behavior, interference, • Gaunt, hunched-up twin or triplet any age neonate’s health, twins, etc.) • Weak, recumbent neonate, esp. <12 hrs. • Dam’s health issues (e.g. no milk) • Evidence of scours or pneumonia E id f i • Neonate health: hypoxia, prematurity, WMD... • Dirty head (stealing milk) • Special health situations (e.g. CAE/OPP) • High lambing/kidding percentages Best outcome = early ID and fostering (<6 hrs) • May choose to bottle feed: friendly kids/lambs, sell milk, you are nuts and love bottle baby chores GRAFTING WARM VS. COLD VS. DEAD • Try it—saves work! • If temp below 99°F, neonate poorly responsive • “Slime method” and <5 hours old: dry, warm, tube feed • Pelt method • If temp below 99°F, neonate poorly responsive and >5 hours old: give warm dextrose IP, warm, 5 • Restraint method R i h d tube feed • Things get easier when • Both will need continued after care (warmth, dam can detect her milk perhaps more tube feeding) smell at baby’s anus • Tie feet of older graftees —struggle and cry like Always investigate primary reason neonate was newborns cold and/or starving INTRAPERITONEAL DEXTROSE (HYPOTHERMIC NEONATE) •20% warm dextrose solution at a rate of 10 mL/kg body weight •Calculate amount needed and multiply by 0.4 to determine how much 50% solution to use. Example: 5 kg x 10 mL/kg = 50 mL of 20% solution L/k L f l ti needed. 50 mL x 0.4 = 20 mL of 50% solution. Draw this amount into syringe. Then draw up the difference (30 mL) in sterile water and warm to body temperature. •Inject into abdominal cavity 1” below and 1” off the midline, pointing needle Photo from www.ukvet.co.uk/ukvet/articles/Sheep toward pelvis using 60 cc syringe and From www.omafra.gov.on.ca/english/livestock/sheep/facts/98-089.htm#f6 _hypothermic%20lamb.pdf 20 gauge needle 3
  • 4. WARMING METHODS FOR CHILLED NEONATES COLOSTRUM = LIFE • NOT heat lamps • Source of nutrition (calories from fat and lactose, protein, vitamins, water), laxative, antibodies • Warm towels • Failure of Passive Transfer increases likelihood of illness • Jackets (wool ☺ ) and death • Neonate s gut is non selective at birth, initially lets Neonate’s non-selective • Warm bath antibodies cross intact. Becomes increasingly more • Warming box selective with every passing hour – Forced hot air • Target 1: minimum of 10% BW in colostrum in 24 hours. Target 2: 3 oz. per pound of body weight div. into 3-4 meals – Elevate baby • After 48 hours: serum Ig level of 1200 mg/dl protective – Monitor • Colostrum with specific gravity > 1.029 is good quality – Remove when mouth • Tube feeding = essential skill; can you do it? Photo from www.shearwell.co.uk warm (temp > 99°F) PASTEURIZATION AND HEAT TREATMENT FEEDING POST-COLOSTRUM • Milk vs. milk replacer? Heat treatment of colostrum: Heat and hold at • Bottle vs. Lam-Bar vs. bucket? 135°F for one hour; stir • Warm vs. cold? • Feed about 3 oz. per pound of body weight daily Pasteurization f ilk Heat to 165°F; ti P t i ti of milk: H t t 165°F stir di id d i t several f di divided into l feedings. S ll f Small frequentt feedings are safer than fewer, larger meals. • Increase amount fed with increasing body weight • Quality milk replacer has animal-origin fat source and milk protein source; >30% fat, >22% protein (lambs); 20% fat, 26% protein (kids) From www.carpinesupply.com • Creep feed, hay, water: start within first week; keep clean and fresh AVERAGE MILK COMPOSITION MILK CONSUMPTION 100 g. Sheep Goat Cow Human • Weeks 0-2: 1+ quart/day Total Solids % 19.3 13 12 12.5 Protein % 6 3.6 3.3 1 • Week 2-3: 1.5 quarts/day Fat % 7 4.1 3.3 4.4 • Week 3-4: ~2 quarts/day Lactose % 5.4 4.5 4.7 6.9 Ash % A h 0.96 0 96 0.82 0 82 0.72 0 72 0.20 0 20 Calcium mg 193 134 119 32 Phos. mg 158 111 93 14 Vit. A µg 83 44 52 58 Vit. D µg 0.18 0.11 0.03 0.04 Vit. C µg Fourth First First Third B-vitamins First Third Second Fourth From www.dairygoatjournal.com 4
  • 5. KEEPIN’ ‘EM ALIVE HUMPY = NOT HAPPY • Supplemental heat: coats, heat lamp; prevent mobbing/crushing • Cleanliness and sanitation paramount – Boots hands Boots, – Pens – Feeding equipment • Ventilation, not drafts • Use good quality milk replacer CONCERNS: SCOURS AND PNEUMONIA SCOURS TREATMENT Prevention! • Isolate • Keep pen and feeding equipment clean • Keep warm • Ensure adequate colostrum intake • Replace milk feedings with electrolyte feedings • Do not overcrowd • Do not hold off milk for more than 24 hours • Feed smaller, more frequent meals vs. few large meals • Do not give oral antibiotics • Do not mix ages in pens • Give probiotics • Fresh air, no drafts • If severe, may need SQ or IV fluids • Move groups into new, clean pens; clean and rest previous pens • Re-introduce milk in small feedings at least 4 hours after electrolytes • Make changes gradually • Provide supplemental heat to prevent chilling • If persists or widespread, consider diagnostic work-up CONTINUED CARE WEANING Must be eating solid feed well and be gaining • Selenium supplementation weight well before weaning • Vaccinations • Coccidia p prevention/treatment Timing: Depends! • No urea in diet until rumen fully functional (3 • At around 20# if feeding milk replacer? ($) months) • After feeding 20-25# of milk replacer? • 18-20% CP supplement to 40#, then 12-14% • At 3-6-8 weeks? 3-6 months? • Weaning Method: Abrupt seems best 5
  • 6. “THE HUSBAND’S EYE” RESOURCES Signs all is well: • Lamb/kid stretches after rising, then runs to nurse • Group not huddled in corner or always under heat lamp • No excessive bleating or baaing • Obvious urination and defecation www.sheepandgoat.com • Belly looks full, not gaunt or bloated • Mouth is pink, warm, moist • Back not hunched up • Contented sleep • Kid/lamb bright, alert, responsive, active, playful • “Happy attacks” DISCLAIMER The information herein is supplied for educational or reference purposes only, and with the understanding that no discrimination is intended. Listing of commercial products implies no endorsement by WSU Extension. Criticism of products or equipment not listed is neither implied or intended. Some medications mentioned herein are available only by prescription, and other drugs are not labeled for use in goats. These drugs can only be used on the advice of a licensed veterinarian when a veterinarian-client- patient relationship exists. Other use violates federal law. Consult your veterinarian about the extra-label use of medications. This information is not intended to replace the advice of your veterinarian. Consult your veterinarian whenever you have a question about your animal’s health. Extension programs and policies are consistent with federal and state laws and regulations on nondiscrimination regarding race, color, gender, national origin, religion, age, disability, and sexual orientation. Evidence of noncompliance may be reported through your local Extension office. 6