AVC Equine Club March 2011 FOALS

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Anesthetic Implications In Neonates & Children: Intravenous fluids
Advertisements

Which of the following is true regarding skin-to-skin contact for all vigorous newborns? Should be within the first 30 minutes of delivery. Should be.
Pregnant Mare Management. Proper mare management is essential: To ensure the birth of a live foal Mare classifications: Pregnant Open Barren Maiden Wet.
© 2007 Thomson - Wadsworth Chapter 13 Nutrition Care and Assessment.
A Foaling Timeline for Owners
Breastfeeding. "What helps reduce the incidence of ear and respiratory infections, intestinal disease, pneumonia, meningitis, Crohn's disease, colitis,
Chapter3 Problems of the neonate and young infant - Neonatal resuscitation.
Foaling Information Dr. Estelle E. Felarise Greene, Lewis and Associates, Inc.
ECMO application: ruled implementation or free diffusion? Milan 2012 Palle Palmér ECMO Centrum Karolinska Karolinska University Hospital, Stockholm Sweden.
Fetal Testing During Pregnancy
Equine Science & Technology Equine Diseases. Anthrax (Splenic Fever) Anthrax- an acute infectious disease affecting horses and other warm-blooded animals.
Great Plains Veterinary Educational Center. Percent calves born dead, died, or were lost during 1996 NAHMS Beef ’97 Study Born dead.
{ NICU Neo-natal Intensive Care Unit.  Volunteer program for pre-vet students to work in the foal ICU at the ISU Veterinary College  Help the Vet Med.
SMALL ANIMAL INTENSIVE CARE UNIT (SAICU) Iowa State University Pre-Vet Club Fall 2012.
CODING Charles T. Hankins, MD. Coding for Neonatal-Perinatal Medicine 1.A neonatologist is asked to attend a repeat c- section. The infant is born.
by Dr. Nahed Said El Nagger
Necrotizing Enterocolitis
Congestive Heart Failure (CHF)
Bonding, Postnatal Care, and The Hospital Stay
Oral Glucose Tolerance Test By: Dr. Beenish Zaki Date: 09/05/2012 Senior Instructor Department of Biochemistry.
Heart Rate CARDIOVASCULAR ENDURANCE. Heart Rate Review ▪ What is one way you can determine your heart rate (discussed last class)? ▪ What is heart rate?
 A volunteer program, that allows pre-vet students to work in the foal ICU at the vet school.  You may be allowed to perform treatments including: 
A100 Equine Parturition. Infovets Educational Resources – – Slide 2 Vaccination of the Pregnant Mare  A vaccination program should include.
Chapter 3 Problems of the neonate Low birth weight babies.
 2011 Calf-ETERIA Study Benchmarking Ontario dairy calf and heifer raising practices Dairy Farmers of Ontario Dairy Research Communication Extension Event.
Animal Overall Health.  What are they?  Measurements of the body’s most basic functions.  Four main vital signs are:  Heart beat (pulse)  Respiration.
Neonatal Assessment RC 290.
Inova Loudoun Hospital ICU SAMANTHA MENDIGUREN. Critical Care Nurse ▪ Assigned one to two patients in the ICU. ▪ Checks on patients overall well being,
Developed by D. Ann Currie, RN, MSN. Physiological Responses of the Newborn to Birth Respiratory Adaptations: Mechanical changes Chemical changes Thermal.
Write these… List and describe the symptoms of pregnancy.
GOING TO THE DOCTOR Prof. Teresita Rojas González.
Section 3 Life stage Feeding. AAFCO does not regulate, test, approve or certify pet foods in any way. AAFCO establishes the nutritional standards for.
Hypoglycemia & Hyperglycemia Dave Joffe, BSPharm, CDE, FACA Part 4.
INTRO INTO CAREER OPTIONS What path will you take?
Pregnancy and Parturition
What is a Veterinarian?. Pets Farm Animals Zoo Animals & Wildlife.
200 pt 300 pt 400 pt 500 pt 100 pt 200 pt 300 pt 400 pt 500 pt 100 pt 200pt 300 pt 400 pt 500 pt 100 pt 200 pt 300 pt 400 pt 500 pt 100 pt 200 pt 300 pt.
The Postnatal Period Chpt 6.3.  Emotional ties happen immediately  Mothers go through emotional changes and it is important that they get the support.
Horse Breeding Procedures and Management By: Anthony Watson.
Calf Management. Initial Examination Clean mouth and nose Clean mouth and nose Make sure it is breathing Make sure it is breathing – If not, check heart.
Infant Car Seat Challenge (ICSC)
Reproduction.
Horse Breeding Procedures and Management
What is the proper care of the mare and foal during and after foaling?
What is your NUMBER? Smart talk about your heart rate and how your NUMBER will help you feel better everyday!!!
Cardio-respiratory Endurance
HOMEOSTASIS The maintenance of a constant internal environment. The main body conditions we have to maintain are: 1.Water content/balance 2.Ion content/balance.
GBED: Glycogen Branching Enzyme Deficiency
Leaving Certificate Agricultural Science
VITAL SIGNS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY.
RESPIRATORY DISTRESS SYNDROME IN NEONATES
Vaccines and Livestock Medicine
Surgical Technician for Canine Spay
And pregnancy complications
Stages of Dog Pregnancy
Case Study: Hypoglycemia/Sepsis Baby Boy Bobby Part I
Induction of Parturition
Mary Jo Bowie MS, BS, AAS, RHIA, RHIT
Cardiovascular Disorders
Impending Delivery Skin-to-Skin in the Labor Room
The Late Preterm Infant
Great Plains Veterinary Educational Center
Neonatal Care EQM 120 – Introduction to Commercial Breeding.
Nutrition in Premature Infants 3/17/10
Nutrition Care and Assessment
Chapter 9 Common surgical problems Burns
Chapter 3 Problems of the neonate Low birth weight babies
Chapter 9 Common surgical problems Burns
Presentation transcript:

AVC Equine Club March 2011 FOALS

Some basics  Gestation length: ~356 days ( days) & variable from one gestation to the next  Premature: <320 days  Dysmature: >320 days but physically immature  Neonatal period: ~ first 2 weeks of life

Normal foal  Size: 10% of mare’s body weight  Sternal <1-2 min  BAR <5 min  Standing <1 hour  Nursing <2 hours  Placenta passed <3 hours

Rules of thumb  “1-2-3” rule  Stand by 1 hour  Nurse by 2 hours  Placenta passed by 3 hours  “2-4-6” rule – call vet if  Not standing by 2 hours  Not nursed by 4 hours  Placenta not passed by 6 hours

Normal foal  Heart rate: beats per minute  Respiratory rate: breaths per minute  Temperature: 37.8 – 38.9  Meconium passage ~24h  First urination ~8-9h  300mL/h  Recumbent ~30% of the time  Nurses 5-8x/hour (~80mL/feeding)

Signs of prematurity  Small  Short, silky hair coat  Floppy ears  Lax tendons  Unregulated homeostasis

What is the most important thing?  Colostrum  ~10% of foals’ body weight  20mL/kg in first 6 hours (1L) Maximum absorptive capacity by 8h Absorption of immunoglobulins decreased >18-24h

No colostrum...  = failure of passive transfer of immunity (FPT)  Problem?  Increased susceptibility to infections  Sepsis = most common cause of morbidity/mortality

How to diagnose FPT?  Measure immunoglobulin levels in serum  Various different tests  At AVC: Glutaraldehyde coagulation test Enzyme immunoassay (SNAP test)  When to test?  18-24h after birth

“I saw my foal nurse...” “... therefore it won’t have FPT...”  True or false?  Other causes of FPT?  Mare dripping milk prior to foaling  Poor colostrum quality Specific gravity <1.060

Treatment of FPT?  Bottle/tube feed colostrum  Plasma :http//

What is also important?  Disinfecting the umbilicus  0.5% chlorhexidine solution  Vitamin E / selenium

The majority of foals... ...do well and do not need assistance

Foals presented to the AVC  Are usually neonates (<2weeks)  End up being intensive care cases  FPT → sepsis  Hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy (‘dummy’ foals)  Other  Accompanied by mare of varying temperament  May need veterinary attention as well

Good management... ...relies on TEAM work  1-2 people for foal restraint  1-2 people for technical procedures  1-2 people to assist  1-2 people to take care of mare  Ideal for work-up: up to 8 people  Ideal for ‘foal watch’: 2 people

What would you be doing?  Restraining  Physical exams  Running blood work; testing for FPT  Administering drugs  Running IV-fluids  Feeding (bottle, nasogastric tube, monitoring nursing)  Monitoring oxygen  Physiotherapy

What you would not be doing  Taking blood  Exception: measuring glucose  Placing catheters  Passing nasogastric tubes

Do you have guidance?  In-house  Try to team you up with a 4 th year student  Floating night technician  Possibly dedicated technician  Resident/intern  On call  Coming in if crisis

What do we expect?  We know you probably don’t have experience... but this is a good way to get some...  We expect you  To be reliable

How is it organized?  Depends on the number of interested people  Lots of people  Make teams (team leader; # of people per team?)  Assign specific dates (Day? Week?) to a team  If team signed up, responsible for coverage!  Only a handful of people  Depends on willingness to commit Sign up for specific dates – responsible for coverage! Get called randomly and we take a chance...

So what happens if a foal comes in?  Most help needed between 11pm - 7am and Saturdays/Sundays  Usually ‘heads-up’  4 th year students on rotation involved  Work-up  Usually hectic  Once stabilized  Make plan

What’s in it for you?  Money? No.  Sleepless nights? Likely.  A good time? Hopefully.  Experience? Yes.  Coffee in the morning? Could be arranged

Not just interested in foals...?  We’re often looking for help with other cases  Colic cases  Other newborns (crias)  ‘Downer’ animals ...

Thank you