raising orphan animals Flashcards

1
Q

Rearing strategy groups

A
  • young raised in pouches (marsupials)
    • low fat, dilute milk, frequent, essentially continual nursing
  • young continuously carried (primates, domestic ungulates)
    • low fat, dilute milk; nursing available at all times
  • leave young and return at intervals to feed them (deer, hooved stock)
    • high fat, concentrated milk
  • leave immature young in burrows or nests (rodents, carnivores, lagomorphs)
    • high fat, concentrated milk
  • cold, wet environments (marine & aquatic mammals)
    • VERY high milk fat & concentrated
      *
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2
Q

Initial issues in rearing a young animal

A
  1. decreasing contamination
    • clean birthing areas
    • bathing
  2. naval care
    • 7% tincture of iodine for 1 minute; done ideally while umbilical stump still moist
  3. stabilizing temperature
    • general rule: 85-90F & 50-60% relative humidity
  4. medications/vitamins
    • only when needed
  5. colostrum
    • GI permeability window usually 12-24h after birth
    • try do deliver 10-20% of orphan BW in colostrum (rarely possible)
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3
Q

______________ can successfully determine whether an orphan has received colostrum or not

A

serum gamma globulin testing

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4
Q

Colostrum to use in order of preference

A
  1. from dam
  2. from same species
  3. from related species
  4. IV serum from dam or same species
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5
Q

Important initial assessments of animal

A
  • Temperature-normally 0.5-1 C lower than adult
    • do not feed a hypothermic neonate bc may get bacterial ovegrowth
  • Injury assessment: airways, hemorrhage, fracture, CNS
  • Dehydration: skin turgor, USG (near or below 10.10)
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6
Q

Is death more common due to overfeeding or underfeeding?

A

OVERFEEDING

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7
Q

Energy requirements equation & concepts

A

E = F x 70.5 x W0.73

E=energy req. kcals/24h
W=weight in kg.
F=species adjustment factor (2.1-3.0)

  • for each 1/2 degree C fever, add 8% energy req.
  • increase energy for high activity
  • increase energy for infections
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8
Q

Hydration requirements

A
  • fluid 10-15% of BW per day
  • 125 ml water per 100 kcal
  • decreases in large neonates and older animals
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9
Q

Hydration req. for neonate compared to adult dog/cat

A
  • 125 ml water per 100 kcal vs. 60 ml per 100 kcal for the adult dog/cat
    • (just over 2x!)
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10
Q

How to adjust formula if constipated

A

thicken the formula

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11
Q

How to adjust formula if stool is loose

A

add water to formula

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12
Q

Consequences of too concentrated diet

A
  • indigestion
  • diarrhea
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13
Q

Consequences of too dilute formula

A
  • pot belly
  • constipation
  • no stool
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14
Q

Required daily assessments

A
  • weight-daily or 2x daily
  • stool consistency (freq., amount)
  • activity level
  • feed intake
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15
Q

How does the milk change in kangaroos and giant anteaters? why is this important?

A

lipid content rises acutely a couple weeks into lactation; need to shift formula of hand reared animals in a similar way or results in severe skin problems

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16
Q

What might happen if you raise cats on dog formula?

A

cataracts

17
Q

Formula can be kept how long under refrigeration?

A

8-10 hours

18
Q

Considerations when picking a nipple

A
  • should fit comfortably in baby’s mouth
  • ideally mimics mother’s teat
  • milk should NOT flow from nipple
  • tube feeding=important option
19
Q

What are some tricks to try to get a baby to nurse?

A
  • mimic female vocalizations
  • cover baby’s eyes
  • touch specific spots on baby
  • let baby suck on finger or cloth
  • preheat the nipple
  • dip the nipple in salt
20
Q

Important considerations when stimulating urination and defecation

A
  • GENTLY use moist warm cotton-tipped swab to simulate perineal region
  • mimic licking motion/pace of adult animal
  • keep perineal region clean and dry
21
Q

How can you tell when it is time to begin weaning?

A
  • eruption of teeth are a good clue
  • acceptance of formula/creep feed mixtures without GI upset
22
Q

What to monitor during weaning?

A

stools, growth