logo

                  

advertisement
subscribe

advertisement

advertisement

Latest comments

  1. Re: Second annual Latinos in Agriculture forum deemed a success

    Posted on Wednesday, 22 May 2013 by Agriculture in the Black Sea Region.

    This project is for and about agriculture in countries aroung Black Sea...

  2. Re: Mastitis prevention and control: A prevention methodology

    Posted on Wednesday, 22 May 2013 by Justo Calderon.

    Great article, nice explanation, easy and interesting to reading And...

  3. Re: Documentary shows struggles of Maine co-op

    Posted on Tuesday, 21 May 2013 by David Bright.

    One correction. MOOMilk is not a co-op. It's an L3C corporation, a...

Feed

Reader favorites

  1. Participate in the 2013 Flavor Faceoff!

    5.0 of 5 stars from 7 votes.
  2. ‘Customer’ feedback: Make a good robotic milking facility great

    5.0 of 5 stars from 4 votes.
  3. Milk-based pregnancy tests: A new trend in 2013?

    5.0 of 5 stars from 4 votes.

Yevet Tenney's header

mike_gangwer

baxter_black

mechanics_corner

The Milk House

Dehorning calves: A presentation by Sheila McGuirk PDF Print E-mail
1 Vote
Podcasts - Dairy Basics
Wednesday, 09 May 2012 13:24

top25This article was #4 of the Top 25 most well-read articles on www.progressivedairy.com in 2012. Click here to jump to the video. It was published in the May 10, 2012 Extra. Click here for the full list of the Top 25.

In this video, Dr. Sheila McGuirk from the University of Wisconsin School of Veterinary Medicine demonstrates how to dehorn a young dairy calf. She includes the use of sedation, anesthesia and pain relief.

Q. How does the use of local anesthesia benefit the person performing dehorning?
With local anesthesia, the calf does not feel the heat applied so it keeps its head still.

When the head is still, the person doing the dehorning can place the dehorner in a correct position and keep it applied for the appropriate amount of time to have the best cosmetic appearance and little to no chance of horn regrowth.
—Dr. Sheila McGuirk, University of Wisconsin School of Veterinary Medicine

VIDEO:
Dr. Sheila McGuirk from the University of Wisconsin School of Veterinary Medicine, assisted by Mindy Wesely, demonstrates how to dehorn a young dairy calf. Video by PD Editor Karen Lee.



Click here to visit Progressive Dairyman's Calf and Heifer Raising section.

Click here to see more Dairy Basics podcasts.

 

2 Comments

Feed
  1. The NSAID used is banamine, which is approved for use in dairy cattle and is a prescription drug. Therefore, a veterinarian is required to be involved with writing and supervising your dehorning protocols, procedures and use of drug. You are correct in recognizing that the use of banamine in dehorning is extra-label, which is another reason for the important role of the veterinarian. The banamine label indicates use for fever associated with respiratory disease and inflammation associated with endotoxemia. My choice in using it for dehorning is based on the scientific evidence that pain and inflammation of dehorning is controlled better with use of a NSAID.
  2. NSAID was used at the end. I thought those weren't allowed commercially for dehorning relief in the US?

Add Comment

 


advertisement

About Us | Subscribe | Advertise | Contribute | Contact Us | Industry Stats | Progressive Forage Grower | Progressive Cattleman

Copyright 2013 Progressive Dairyman

This site is optimized to be viewed with Firefox, Safari and Internet Explorer 8 web browsers.

pp_logo_k_0910