Milk Fever
Moderators: Pike Ridge Beagles, Aaron Bartlett
Milk Fever
Has anyone had a nursing female get milk fever before? If you have did you take her to the vet or did you treat it yourself? If you did treat it what did you do?
$370 ????????........thats unbelieveable!
All your vet would have done is give her a calcium supplement interveneous injection. Thats crazy...... But absolutely, there are supplements you can pick up which do well as preventative. I would say just ask your vet......but not yours! Find another one or check the feed stores, or Super Pet, etc

It's not that life is short......it's just that we're dead for such a long, long time...
I did have my first beagle end up with milk fever. My vet told me to start giving the PetCal tabs about two weeks before she was due and then for a couple weeks after she had pups. I did that and never had any problems with any of my females. I sure was walking on pins and needles for the next couple litters from my old girl after that though!
The first couple of days after the pups were born, I also supplemented her food with cottage cheese also.
I had to take her in in the middle of the night and the vet was amazed that I even caught it. Thank goodness I had her in the house with me or I probably wouldn't have caught it!
Good luck!
The first couple of days after the pups were born, I also supplemented her food with cottage cheese also.
I had to take her in in the middle of the night and the vet was amazed that I even caught it. Thank goodness I had her in the house with me or I probably wouldn't have caught it!
Good luck!
You can get them at most pet or feed stores, but I got mine from Jeffers. Here's the link to them:
http://www.jefferspet.com/ssc/product.a ... K4WLJGC10E
http://www.jefferspet.com/ssc/product.a ... K4WLJGC10E
What is milk fever? I have never heard of it. What are the signs/symptoms?
Check out our website: http://www.houghskennels.com
Milk fever is also called eclampsia (sp). It is a calcium deficiency. The female gets very weak and can't stand up, falls over, etc. I'm sure there is more to it than just that. In my case I had to help her out to go to the bathroom and then hold her up to go and that's when I knew for sure something was wrong!
My vet's theory was that we make their systems lazy so that they don't produce enough of their own calcium by supplementing them with vitamins. He didn't know it at the time, but I was giving her a Pet Tab every day. It made sense to me! Another vet was furious at me for breeding her the next time after that happening. I explained that my other vet told me it would be find giving the Cal Tabs, or I never would have bred her again. She finally settled down a little bit. Sure does show the difference in vets!
My vet's theory was that we make their systems lazy so that they don't produce enough of their own calcium by supplementing them with vitamins. He didn't know it at the time, but I was giving her a Pet Tab every day. It made sense to me! Another vet was furious at me for breeding her the next time after that happening. I explained that my other vet told me it would be find giving the Cal Tabs, or I never would have bred her again. She finally settled down a little bit. Sure does show the difference in vets!
I lost a bitch to enclampsia or milk fever. Its just like Vickie wrote except in my case I really dropped the ball so to speak. My bitch was acting funny just before I went to bed but I figured she was about to welp (yes, apparently this can happen before the pups are even born) When I got up in the morning she was all but gone......just laying there twitching and too late to save. Ever since that episode I keep an injectable calcium supplement on hand.
It's not that life is short......it's just that we're dead for such a long, long time...