Hi,
Newish sheep person, with support from our Diary farm neighbours.
I'm looking for helpful suggestions to get my girl back to health, primarily eating and standing. Sorry for the long post - just wan tto give as much background.
She got really bad fly strike 3 weeks ago, only after 4 weeks of being shorn. Covered with maggots, all round her shoulders and nape. We thought we caught it in time,treated and antibiotic and she was still with us after the critical 3/4 days.
The skin had started to change, being the black scabby parts were starting to crack, and pinkish new skin coming through. Shes a big girl (4 years old and never lambed), and shes got bad neck rolls from being tubby. They started to crack and fill up with gunge, but the skin/fleece still connected either side. Tried to clean up, antispectic, and keep an eye on. Painkiller jag.This was probably week 1.
By week 2, she still was barely eating, but getting up and walking about a bit. Still drinking and tiny amount of grazing, but not her sheep food mix. Parts of her was healing really well, but rolls now awful, and smelly, and one side like a perpetutal graze that wouldn't heal. By end of week two, she was really struggling to get standing, walking, and we could see fluid retention one side under her neck/shoulder. Another but different antibiotic and pain jag, and stabled her inside.
Still very little interest in food, but can get her to take a bottle x3 a day with live yoghurt, honey, bicard and ph salt, and bottle of water, but she was also getting up to her water. She was an orphan lamb so happy bottle fed. She licked at crushed digestives, and I think was maybe also eating some of the hay in there, but it was hard to tell. She was changing positions, but still very shaky weak on her feet. All this time, still ittle Baas of hellos, and ears pricking up with familiar sounds. She is not giving up!
We've then realised the top wound at the rolls, there was a 'hole' gap that looked grim. Some of the others at the yard said there were magpies on her at one point, so potentially been pecked.
Anyway, vet came out to see her ( has just been giving antibiotics and pain med to pick up). He has made two cuts for the fluid retention, as one side was a drain straight through from that top hole !! Horrific. Then she has a small sore on the other side, which has drained the other side, but also why its not healing. Flushed it and flushed and flushed it. He also removed all the 'folds' connection, so it's just a big open wound ( no skin). Sounds and looks awful, but I can imagine it healing.... Shes now on daily antibiotic jags, daily flushing of holes, and blue spray, and metacam every 3 days.
Vet also listened to her rumen ( faint, but making a few noises), and dung checked her, not great, but ok given her state. He said she thought better to be in paddock, with fresh grass than stable. On her way round wanted to scoff a garden plant - should have let her have more, but was wanting to use the adrenaline of her treatment, to at least get round to the grass.
So we're not 3 ish days since vet saw her, and ultimately 21 days since it first all began. Shes really struggling to get on her feet, quite often rolling on her side, and scraping any traction she might get away, through failed attempts. She definItley did get up and move her self a couple of times, but mostly it's us, hoisting up her back legs, letting her get a breath, and using a wide towel to heave her up. Couple of steps ( usually with a pee), then back down again.
Her fleece is falling out, combo of man handling her to get her up, and vet says stress response. So now tucking hay around her to sleep in the field.
Shes lasted so long, and has such a determination to live, that I cant give up on her now. I think if she can just get ahead of the wound, or get decent fuel in her, and get standing and mobile, she would get better. She has bad pressure sores on her knees from all of this as well, and that is not helping with her mobility ( antibiotics should be helping to heal though)
The wound recovery, is being addressed through the flushing, and antibiotics. I can see progress there, albeit slow.
Today, I wide necked syringe slushy sugary weetabix in to her, two bricks. My instinct is telling me to try and get more substantial food into her, to try and get her strength back for getting her moving. Also the more she has to digest, the more she will become hungry, and then she will seek it out herself more.
I'm stuck on the getting up and getting her moving. I'm going to see if i can use a harness type thing to try and get her upright for a bit longer to see if that will help any. Or a least get a hay bale under her to support for a bit.
Anyway i feel she is slowly getting worse, not better, but also feel she must be so close to getting ahead of the wound and making a recovery.
So if you've read this far, thank you so much, and any advice from anything that I've said would be so gratefully received. She is so loved, and I owe her the best chance to get better.
L