Affiliation:
1. Clinic for Ruminants with Ambulatory and Herd Health Services, LMU
Munich, Germany
Abstract
AbstractThe present report aims to describe the case of a duodenal obstruction ileus in a
dairy cow that was caused by a cage magnet. The 4.7-year-old German Fleckvieh
cow was hospitalized because of symptoms of intestinal obstruction such as
anorexia, noticeable drop in milk yield, reduced defecation, dehydration and
positive percussion and swinging auscultation in a circumscribed area cranial of
the right flank over the last 2 ribs. Six months as well as 3 days prior to
hospitalization the cow had already been treated for signs of hardware disease,
which included administration of a cage magnet.After the initial clinical diagnostic procedure on hospital admission, a
diagnostic laparotomy in the right paralumbar fossa was performed to identify
the cause of the ileus. The cranial part of the duodenum was markedly dilated,
and a solid foreign body was found obstructing the intestine immediately aboral
to the duodenal sigmoid flexure. This was identified as a cage magnet, which was
massaged in retrograde direction into the pyloric antrum and removed via
abomasotomy. The cow recovered from surgical intervention and was discharged
from the hospital 6 days later.The present report describes an unusual complication of cage magnet
administration, which is a standard veterinary procedure and generally
considered a safe treatment option in cows with clinical signs of acute
traumatic reticuloperitonitis.