Sorry if you are squeamish. This one is kind of gross. And sad. Don't read if you are easily affected....
What you are looking at is known as a 'schistosomus reflexus' calf. It's a pretty rare birth defect that obviously is fatal.
Most large animal vets only encounter one in their entire career. This is mine.
I was called out by one of our more experienced beef farmers for help with a calving. It's the first time I know of that he's called us - so he's pretty good with getting stuck calves out on his own. (That means it's going to be difficult on my end.) When I arrived, he told me there were twins and he couldn't sort out which legs were which.
The cow was actually a very uncooperative heifer - it was her first calving and she had no idea what was going on. I gave her an epidural to relax her a bit and she calmed down. When I reached in, I knew pretty quickly that this was NOT twins but a deformed calf. I wasn't sure what the defect was until I felt the winged-out rib cage and could feel the intestines just behind it - then I knew, pretty certainly, that it was a schistosomus. I explained to the farmer what was going on. He had never heard of it before and was skeptical that this little tiny female vet knew what she was talking about.
I told him that he had two options - 1) C-section or 2) put her down. She was a very hard-to-handle heifer with a nonviable offspring. He is a full-time farmer and he had to consider the expense and the benefit/risk of a c-section. They have to give antibiotics post-op and he had such a hard time getting her caught THIS time that his biggest worry is that he wouldn't be able to care for her properly after the surgery and she would die. Her dying after a c-section is a risk even if able to do all post-op care well. It happens.
So, due to a multitude of factors, he opted to put her down. I explained that I would really like to examine the calf after she was deceased if he was ok with that. He was - because he still was convinced there was a twin.
Because of his insistence that there was a twin, lethal injection was not an option. IF there was another calf, the euthanasia solution would kill it, as well. So, the farmer shot her. Now, for those of you who think that is terrible, let me just say this: a proper shot is an instantaneous death. Even a lethal injection is not painless and is often more stressful for a heifer like this than shooting her would be. He delivered an excellent shot and she dropped instantly. We quickly pulled her from the chute with a truck and I did a c-section post-mortum to deliver the calf.
There was just the one calf - and this is it. It had 3 front legs and one back leg - all pointing forward (hence why he thought there were twins.) In this particular birth defect, the spine folds in half so that the ribs 'flare out' and the intestines are on the outside. Schistosomus are known as 'inside out' calves.
It's amazing to me that the farmer reported that this calf was alive and moving when he first reached in to try and help deliver it. It had died prior to my arrival.
I hope that this is the only one of these I ever see in my career. But I am thankful for the learning experience of it and that the farmer was quick to know that the heifer was in distress and she did not have to suffer.
And it's rare things like these that make me grateful for all of the healthy animals running around. It really is a miracle, when considering all the things that CAN go wrong in development, that the majority of baby animals come out completely normal and healthy. Tomorrow will be a happier blog. :)
What you are looking at is known as a 'schistosomus reflexus' calf. It's a pretty rare birth defect that obviously is fatal.
Most large animal vets only encounter one in their entire career. This is mine.
I was called out by one of our more experienced beef farmers for help with a calving. It's the first time I know of that he's called us - so he's pretty good with getting stuck calves out on his own. (That means it's going to be difficult on my end.) When I arrived, he told me there were twins and he couldn't sort out which legs were which.
The cow was actually a very uncooperative heifer - it was her first calving and she had no idea what was going on. I gave her an epidural to relax her a bit and she calmed down. When I reached in, I knew pretty quickly that this was NOT twins but a deformed calf. I wasn't sure what the defect was until I felt the winged-out rib cage and could feel the intestines just behind it - then I knew, pretty certainly, that it was a schistosomus. I explained to the farmer what was going on. He had never heard of it before and was skeptical that this little tiny female vet knew what she was talking about.
I told him that he had two options - 1) C-section or 2) put her down. She was a very hard-to-handle heifer with a nonviable offspring. He is a full-time farmer and he had to consider the expense and the benefit/risk of a c-section. They have to give antibiotics post-op and he had such a hard time getting her caught THIS time that his biggest worry is that he wouldn't be able to care for her properly after the surgery and she would die. Her dying after a c-section is a risk even if able to do all post-op care well. It happens.
So, due to a multitude of factors, he opted to put her down. I explained that I would really like to examine the calf after she was deceased if he was ok with that. He was - because he still was convinced there was a twin.
Because of his insistence that there was a twin, lethal injection was not an option. IF there was another calf, the euthanasia solution would kill it, as well. So, the farmer shot her. Now, for those of you who think that is terrible, let me just say this: a proper shot is an instantaneous death. Even a lethal injection is not painless and is often more stressful for a heifer like this than shooting her would be. He delivered an excellent shot and she dropped instantly. We quickly pulled her from the chute with a truck and I did a c-section post-mortum to deliver the calf.
There was just the one calf - and this is it. It had 3 front legs and one back leg - all pointing forward (hence why he thought there were twins.) In this particular birth defect, the spine folds in half so that the ribs 'flare out' and the intestines are on the outside. Schistosomus are known as 'inside out' calves.
It's amazing to me that the farmer reported that this calf was alive and moving when he first reached in to try and help deliver it. It had died prior to my arrival.
I hope that this is the only one of these I ever see in my career. But I am thankful for the learning experience of it and that the farmer was quick to know that the heifer was in distress and she did not have to suffer.
And it's rare things like these that make me grateful for all of the healthy animals running around. It really is a miracle, when considering all the things that CAN go wrong in development, that the majority of baby animals come out completely normal and healthy. Tomorrow will be a happier blog. :)
absolutely amazing story. I am not affected but very interested in the things you do and see. It's amazing to see what you have to battle with and try to help people with. Great job on making sure the cow didn't suffer.
ReplyDeleteawesome!
ReplyDeleteSo, the day after Dr. Bowman reads this post, he has to go out and do a c-section for a schistosomas! And there was a normal twin! It was his 4th inside-outie calf. Odd!
ReplyDeleteHave you ever come across a hermaphrodite calf? I'm asking because my brother just had one born by him.
ReplyDeleteWow, we had this happen with a beef cow and it acctually looked exactly like this, we didnt call the vet ,but we put the cow down and since my older sister is becoming a vet she wanted to check the calf out and she was very interseted in the disease. this was a life lesson and i was surprised with what it looked like ot was an amazing thing to see and experience. Thanks to your blog I know more about this desiese and how to handle it.
ReplyDeleteThank you for this info. I just experienced one of these last nite. The cow, a six year old reg. angus SAV 8180 Traveler 004 dam AI bred to TC Aberdeen had the deformed calf on her own. Have not told my vet about this yet and doubt I will. Checked the Angus Assc. website and found nothing about this defect listed.
ReplyDeleteI wanted to add to your info. I am 47 and have been around cattle all of my life. I take care of all of my cows myself and very rarely call a vet. Tonight I almost did. It is 12:45 am and I just got in the house from pulling an inside out calf. I had heard of them but never seen one--until now. It is the most confusing thing ever. Also thought there were twins but couldn't get the 4 feet sorted out and the head was right there. The 1 front leg didn't flex the right way to be a front. I was finally able to trace down to the neck and during this the calf was alive and moving. When I got past the neck It felt real short and then the chest seemed to stop and I could feel the heart beating and it felt like it was not protected like it should. At this point I identified the feet that went with the neck and we pulled them forward as far as they would go. The head came with and then all stopped. upon feeling in I could push the hind feet back alittle and they just came back, I didn't realize they were the hind yet I could just tell the first calf was deformed and wouldn't move with the standard puller. I felt again and relized there was a crooked spine and moved around it and thought I had to save the cow. An old vet about 30 yrs ago told my dad and I how to put a log chain on the head and pull a calf.(In that case it was a head only presentation and we were 40 miles from a vet- we got that calf alive) It was worth a shot. Sounds terrible but it worked. It puts the pulling on the main body and doesn't tighten down. It worked to get this calf out and I knew what it was when I saw it. Looks just like the picture of this one. The cow is fine-- very mad, I think they know something is really wrong because this one went crazy also. She is however alive and healthy. I hope that this is a once in a lifetime thing -- because I never want to see this again!! Carol B.
ReplyDeleteToday it was my second day as a trainee vet nurse.
ReplyDeleteWe got called out to a dairy farm and had this situation.
The vet did a C-Section. And the cow was fine.
Was very interesting to see.
And a great start to my adventure to become a vet nurse!
The information that you have shared is certainly useful for those learning to take care of cows. I am thankful for that but at the same time I also feel a doctor, whether an animal (vet) or for a human should be invested with humane emotions like love and affection not just dry curiosity as the case seems to be here. How can you suggest the cow to be put down just because she was not cooperative and had delivered a deformed calf?
ReplyDeleteWill you respond in a similar manner in the case of human beings?
It is the Lord who decides and plans for everybody's life and death. He is the ultimate creator and logically be the ultimate destroyer too. Is it so difficult to surrender to the Lord?
Dr. Vrinda Baxi
Dr. Vrinda Baxi, you don't know much about cows, do you? As a farmer, I know that the likelihood of a cow breeding back after a C-section is very unlikely. That's if the cow even survives recovery. These cows are our livelihood, while we obviously want to treat them with as much love and respect as they deserve, you also have to look at whether the animal is better off to be put down(as far as suffering, as well as the business side of it.
ReplyDeleteI am a dairy farmer from new zealand and i came across this for the first time tonight, an inside out calf. On my original inspection i found two feet a head and another foot and initially thought it was twins, but could not figure out which feet were which as the joints were not bending the correct way. Now if I can't pull a calf out in ten minutes i call the vets, on his arrival he also thought it was twins. Once we realised what we were dealing with, we attempted to cut the calf in half at the V, but to no avail, sadly we had to put the cow down.
ReplyDeleteJust done one (vet in NZ) - one cut fetotomy, less than 30 minutes. I usually see a couple each year
ReplyDeleteDo you not do fetotomies? I had the second one of my career (been in practice in UK for 2.5 years) last night. It took 3 hours but I got it out by fetotomy by firstly cutting it in half through the spine, then removing the head, one front leg, the other front leg, then one back leg, and the rest came out as one piece. The cow is totally fine today and expected to make a full recovery. As far as I know my practice has not had to euthanase a cow for schistosomus. But I am guessing temperament would have been a major factor, even with sedation.
ReplyDeleteIt's been a while since I've visited this blog, apparently! Yes, I do fetotomies. The problem with this particular case is there was nothing I could 'cut' with my wire. I couldn't get around anything. I'm only 5'4" and though my skinny little arms are great at maneuvering around inside a cow, this one was not cooperative.
DeleteWow..... I wonder if environmental factors cause this? It seems important to pinpoint the source to prevent it.
ReplyDeleteThis happened on Dr.pol, season 10 ep 11. They didn't have to do a c-section or put the cow down. Cow survived, baby was, of course, dead.
ReplyDeleteThey also didn't cut up the baby. But they did use that big metal thing to pull it out
DeleteI do a lot of cows, dairy and beef. But I see at least 1-2 Schistosomas a yr.. Most i do a CS, only once I did a Fetotomy.
ReplyDeleteAnd I had one of my own on one of my beef cows. a twin. First one came out happy and alive, the second one was a Schisie... but all okay and a happy mommie
I never what to see one.
ReplyDeleteThank you for this article, and especially for the photo. Yesterday we had our first experience with an "inside-out calf". Fortunately, our vet was able to save the cow by removing the calf in pieces. I tried to imagine what the poor calf would have looked like whole, and couldn't believe it grew to full term in that inside-out position. Having seen the photo, my mind is now at rest. We now have an even greater appreciation for our skilled vet, and for the miracle of a "normal" birth.
ReplyDeleteWe had one last night. Vet checked. Calf dead. Cow alive over night. We took it to the locker for hamburger. Second one for our vet this year, otherwise I guess really rare!
ReplyDeleteWe had this same thing happen yesterday and the cow gave birth after a long evening after the intestines were delivered. There was nothing to grab and doing anything else wasn’t feasible. We left it knowing the cow not making it was the most likely outcome. Woke this morning to her walking around and she had delivered the calf. We homeschool and this was a great biology lesson and became part dissection lab for our oldest.
ReplyDelete