Hello,
We have a 2 1/2 month old baby goat that was given to us from a reputable breeder a few weeks ago... Since we got him, he has contracted a cold (which we have tried treating naturally, but can't seem to get rid of), and has been suffering from bloating, which I believe is caused by worms. He was dewormed before he came to our farm, and we have been deworming him here with natural and chemical pellet dewormer from TSC. Would anyone know how we can help this little guy? And what kind of worm could cause the bloating? I feel so bad for him because his stomach just looks huge, especially at the end of the day.
Thank you!
Have you ever had goats before? Do you know what it looks like when a goat has a rumen full of hay and browse? It is large, but it is different from bloating. Bloat is an illness that will kill them without treatment,
you can read about the different types here. If he looks large by the end of the day, it means that he has eaten all day and filled himself up with hay, browse, etc. He 'deflates' by the morning because he has spent the night ruminating, chewing his cud and digesting.
Have you had a veterinarian see him? Have you had a fecal test run? If not, do both. The pellet wormer will not actually work against a heavy worm load, it is pretty useless. Plus, for it to even work somewhat, he would need to eat it all and eat enough, according to his weight. If he under eats, you've just made all the worms in his gut
resistant to that drug! Have the fecal look for coccidia numbers (this is very important) and for worms (number and types). Worms and coccidia are two different things and need different treatments.
Coccidia is a killer of kids. All goats have coccidia in their digestive tract and stool, but a healthy adult immune system can keep numbers in check. Kids and sick adults cannot, so the protozoan (not worm) proliferates in their gut, damages the lining of the intestines, and causes them to be unable to absorb nutrients. This is why all kids should be on a preventative schedule of treatment for coccidia (once every three weeks, how long it takes the protozoan to grow from an oocyst to a mature, damaging adult) until they are six months old.
Call a veterinarian
today. Catch a sample of stool
today. Wait with him in a clean area, with gloves (or another plastic baggie over your hand), and a plastic baggie, and collect at least 1/4 cupish, more is better.
"All natural" stuff is useless unless an animal has a low load of everything. If herbals cured parasitism, we wouldn't need modern medicine nor would there be massive problems with parasites in third world countries.
Has he been given a preventative treatment for coccidia? If not, that does need to start
immediately. The feed store should have corid, sulmet, or dimethox. Those are three easy to acquire medications that are used. It is given for
five days in a row, dosed according to his weight (he must be weighed, underdosing is just as bad as overdosing, it leads to resistance). These drugs are coccidiastats, stops them from growing.Toltrazuril is harder to get, but can be given with one dose. It is a coccidiacide, it kills them.