
02/23/05, 02:17 PM
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Join Date: May 2002
Location: North of Houston TX
Posts: 4,817
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It does sound a little alarming, not only the small flecks in the milk, which is usually an overgrowth of cells, but also the cold teats...you are sure nobody is nursing her? Staph mastitis is the catalyst for malignant edema/gangrenous mastitis, read the article on saanendoah.com, just as something to keep in the back of your mind.
At this point until you do either have the milk tested for staph, or have further sypmtoms, you could give her chewable vitamin c each day, I simply throw a whole container of the cheap Wallmart people kind in the blender, make a powder and give them a tablespoon over their grain, and I would also milk her 3 times a day for awhile rather than 2, not drink her milk, and not feed it to doelings. The more frequent milkings may do the trick, and vitamin C is wonderful for udder health.
I wouldn't start down the road of infusions and meds quite yet, and before you do go that way, take some of the milk into a spotlessly clean baby food jar or something small and freeze it, this way if you guess wrong on what drug to use, you can still send in a milk sample and find out what you are dealing with. Perhaps now you can call around and see what local lab folks who have cattle use.
Most mastitis problems can be directly linked to nutrition, especially copper defficency, and cleanliness at milking. Most staph is spread by us from one doe to the next. Keeping a good quality loose mineral out at all times, which is geared towards cattle or horses, no other salt in any form offered so they go to the mineral for thier salt, and really looking over our milking routine. No harsh chemicals, no unecessary pulling, they are goats not cows, dipping with something non irritating, and not using greasy salves and balms which trap staph between the goop and the udder skin, the perfect warm moist place to keep staph right at the orifice of the teat. Vicki
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Vicki McGaugh
Nubian Soaps
North of Houston TX
www.etsy.com/shop/nubiansoaps
A 3 decade dairy goat farm homestead that is now a retail/wholesale soap company and construction business.
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