HOW TO GIVE INJECTIONS TO CATTLE

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HOW TO GIVE INJECTIONS TO CATTLE

Post no-857 Dt 14/09/2018
Compiled & shared by-DR RAJESH KUMAR SINGH ,JAMSHEDPUR,JHARKHAND, INDIA, 9431309542,rajeshsinghvet@gmail.com

This article is mainly intended for people engaged in veterinary first, paravets and livestock trained personnel doing vaccination and first aid services under the guidance of a veterinarian & intention is to disseminate the knowledge among paravets for good management practices & animal welfare.

General – hygiene

• When giving injections always get veterinary advice to make sure the products are appropriate and you know the correct procedure. A loaded syringe can be a dangerous weapon for both you and any helpers. If anyone does get injected, then seek immediate medical help, taking the product with you to the doctor.
• Follow the manufacturer’s instructions to the letter for storage and use of the product.
• Make sure you take care to dispose of old syringes, needles and packaging in a safe place. Needles are especially dangerous and should really go into a special “sharps” rubbish box.
• Various pathogenic bacteria are present on the surface of the skin and these may produce infection if injected with the medication.
• Therefore, when time allows or for valuable animals, or if the environment is very dirty, take every care to clean and disinfect the skin before injecting.
• If the injection is made on the side of the neck and the site is covered by hair, close clipping of the skin is ideal, but careful separation of the coat and scrubbing the skin with a disinfectant may be possible.
• There are lots of disinfection preparations on the market which are satisfactory. Tincture of iodine is satisfactory and is better than methylated spirits which, though commonly used, is not effective as a disinfectant.
• A fresh swab of disinfectant should be used for each animal.
• Single syringes are mainly disposable these days but if a multiple-injection gun is used it must be disinfected when practical.
• The gun, including all parts coming in contact with the product to be injected, should be placed in a large container such as a pressure cooker or saucepan and thoroughly boiled with the lid on.
• Bringing to the boil will kill all normal bacteria and boiling for 15 minutes will ensure the destruction of most bacterial spores.
• After boiling, the saucepan or container should be tipped sideways with the lid on so that the water drains out (like pouring off potatoes).
• With all the water out, the syringe and the plunger may be picked up by external parts only and carefully fitted together without touching any part which will contact the material injected. Wash and dry your hands before picking up and assembling the injection equipment.
• Equipment that cannot be boiled cannot be adequately disinfected. The best you can do is to soak it in a solution of disinfectant. Pour this off and then flush with cold boiled water. The latter should have been boiled in a lidded container and allowed to cool with the lid on.
• If they are not washed thoroughly with water, injecting guns and syringes may contain some of the disinfectant, and this may inactivate the vaccine, or cause irritation and damage of the tissues when injected.
• To remove vaccine or other medication from the bottle in a clean manner, swab the neck and stopper of the bottle with a solution of suitable disinfectant.

NB—In practice, the above comments may be hopelessly impractical particularly in country like India and that too in rural area. For example, if you have to vaccinate 300 calves with enterotoxaemia vaccine, you will not want to disinfect the skin of each animal. You may simply proceed down the race injecting each beast in a clean part of the neck, taking care to keep your hands clean (and washing them if they become dirty), and taking care to keep the needle clean (and replacing it if it becomes dirty).
Generally, use the smallest needle that is suitable, i.e. the needle with the narrowest bore, such as a 19-gauge needle. In tough-skinned cattle a stouter needle may be necessary, e.g. a 16-gauge.

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Subcutaneous injection (under the skin)——-

• This is the easiest and quickest form of injection, and it is used for many vaccines and drugs that are non-irritant and are readily absorbed.
• With cattle in a race to give a subcutaneous injection, pull up a handful of skin to make a “tent” and slide the needle into the base of the tent under the skin and press the plunger.
• Check when doing this to make sure the jet from the syringe is not coming out the other side of the tent because you’ve pushed the needle too far through.
• With irritant materials as some vaccines can be, a reaction may result producing a lump. This may blemish the carcase when the animal is killed and dressed. In such cases, make the injection at the top and to one side of the neck. Any lump that occurs here can be trimmed off when the carcase is dressed.
• With cattle, an injection is usually made under loose skin either on the neck or just behind the shoulder. There is plenty of loose skin in the dewlap too but it’s difficult to get at when the beast is in a race or headbail. And the beast’s head is always there moving around and can hit you especially when it feels the prick of the needle.
• There is also loose skin around the tail (the caudal fold) and it’s easy to get at but is often soiled by faeces. This is the spot where the Tb test injection is given.

Intramuscular injection (into the muscle)———-

• Many drugs have to be injected deep into the muscles to give more rapid absorption and may lead to less irritation.
• In cattle the intramuscular injection should be given deep into the muscles of the neck rather than into the big muscle mass of a hind quarter. The reason is that the rear end is where the high-priced meat is on the carcass, and is the last place you want to cause an abscess in the carcase to be found when the beast is killed.
• When injecting into the neck the beast can see you coming and often moves, whereas injecting in the rump there is less chance of it being aware of what is going on till afterwards. If the beast feels pain with the initial jab or when the product is being forced out of the syringe, watch for it kicking out at you.
• You can warn a beast by banging on the injection spot with your fist a couple of times before you stick the needle in.
• It is important that the injection is not put into subcutaneous fat and actually hits muscle. That’s why it needs to go in deep.
• Just before pressing the syringe plunger; withdraw it a little and if has inadvertently gone into a blood vessel, blood will show in the barrel of the syringe. If this happens the needle must be moved to a new site so that the injection is intramuscular and not intravenous.
• If a spore of some clostridial organism such as tetanus, blackleg, black disease or malignant oedema, is lying harmlessly in the muscle, the disturbance created by the injection may cause it to germinate leading to fatal disease. This is a good reason for keeping clostridial vaccinations up-to-date.

Intravenous injection (into the vein)————-

• It’s probably best to avoid giving intravenous injections (into the vein) and leave them to your veterinarian as finding a vein and injecting into it properly can be tricky.
• You can do intravenous injections under veterinary supervision and where you can demonstrate to your veterinarian that you are competent to carry out the task.
• Intravenous injections are generally given into the jugular vein in the neck and it can be tricky to find. The cow should be well restrained when locating the vein and when injecting.
• For downer cows, the protruding milk vein just in front of the udder is easy to find but it’s often covered in mud if the cow has been down for a while.
• If the vein is missed, there can be serious bleeding under the skin, and accidental injection of many medications around the vein instead of into it can cause a very nasty reaction, sometimes with sloughing of the skin.
• There are many medications that could kill or do serious damage if injected into a vein and run in too quickly.
• For example, when injecting calcium solutions intravenously, a veterinarian may listen to the heartbeat to gauge the rate of injection by the response of the heart. Without this, sudden deaths may occur.
• For large volumes e.g. for milk fever or grass staggers, injections come in bottles or sachets with a long rubber tube attached to the needle so that the solution is gravity fed and the rate must be controlled by the height at which you hold the container.
• Because the rapid injection of any medication into a vein can be lethal, all intravenous injections are given very slowly. The beast must also be fully restrained
To give a proper I.V. you must know exactly where the vein is that you want to hit. Your needle then must be threaded into the vein and must remain there throughout the whole injection process. Many of the medicines and whatnot intended for I.V. administration are damaging to bodily tissues, and can cause tissue neurosis or tissue sloughing if inadvertently injected outside the blood vessel. Remember also that an artery runs alongside each vein, and some I.V. medications can be lethal when introduced into an artery. However, if for some reason you find that you absolutely must administer an intravenous injection, the following tips should prove helpful:

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On larger animals the jugular vein is the most common intravenous injection site. To find this vein press your thumb into the jugular furrow near the juncture of the animal’s neck and shoulder (below the location of the intended shot). If you do this properly, you’ll be able to watch the vein distend itself along the length of the furrow.

Then, while the blood vessel is held distended, direct an 18-gauge, 1 1/2-inch needle (up to a 14-gauge can be used for horses and cows, but, since too much medicine injected overly quickly can cause shock, the smaller needle helps prevent this) at a right angle to the neck and thrust it firmly into the vein. If you do this correctly, a steady drip of blood from the needle’s base will soon assure you that its point is indeed inside the vein. That’s the signal to maintain your thumb pressure while you push the business end of your “hypo” parallel to the vein and in the direction of the beast’s chest. Seat the needle up to its shoulder in the lumen (the hollow center) of the jugular. Blood should continue to drip from the needle during this process.

Attach the FILLED TO OVERFLOWING syringe to the needle, draw its plunger back slightly to make absolutely sure that no air is trapped in either the needle or syringe and that they contain only blood and the medication which will be injected. Make the injection, remove the needle, and pinch the injection site to prevent leakage. (It’s a good idea, too, after giving the I.V., to release the pressure on the vein and then apply it again—until blood appears in the syringe—to prevent any fluid from oozing out into the surrounding tissues when the needle is withdrawn.)

Intramammary injections (into the udder)————

• These are needed to get antibiotics into the udder to treat mastitis infections.
• These are “lactation” antibiotics and “dry-cow” antibiotics. They should never be confused as dry-cow antibiotics are much more powerful than lactational ones and should always be stored separately to avoid errors in use.
• If the cow gets a mastitis infection during the dry period then use lactation antibiotics to treat it.
• They are really “infusions” using the long plastic neck on the tube rather than a needle to deliver the treatment into the udder.
• Remember the teat sphincter (circular muscle) on the end of teat, opening into the teat canal is very delicate.
• The teat is the most sensitive part of the cow so work gently and with care and watch out for a swift kick. It will pay you to restrain the cow before you start.
• First clean the end of the teat with swabs of cotton wool and meths until they show no more dirt. This may take quite a few rubs. If you don’t clean the teat end – all you’ll do is to push dirt and bugs into the teat and cause more problems.
• Clean the front teats first then the back ones.
• Regardless of the length of the neck on the tube (they come in different lengths), insert it just enough to deliver the product into the teat canal.
• Treat the back teats first then the front ones – the reverse of cleaning them.
• Don’t take the top of the tube until you are ready to use it.
• After the full tube has been emptied into the teat, hold the teat end between finger and thumb to seal it, and with the other finger and thumb give it one gentle massage up into the udder.
• If you use any non-antibiotic product that just seals the teat, farmers often put the tubes in a bucket of warm water to soften them. This is not a wise move as the water gets dirty and there’s a high chance that you will put infection into the udder with the sterile product.
• Teat spray all teats immediately after treatment and keep a close watch for any problems.

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Intra-Peritoneal Injections——

Occasionally, it may be necessary to give large amounts of fluid to a sick creature. Often these quantities are best given intraperitoneally (I.P.). That is, the fluid is injected into the stomach cavity where it is then absorbed by the peritoneum lining.

The trick in I.P. shots is to get the liquid into the cavity and not into the intestines. Luckily, goats, sheep, and cattle have a ready-made area for needle insertion: the right paralumbar fossa. This is a triangular area lying between the hipbone (the forward bone of the pelvis) and the last rib, with the vertebrae forming an upper boundary. Only the right side of the animal is used because a large part of any ruminant’s stomach (the rumen) lies on the left side and could be injured by an injection there.

A 1 1/2- to 2-inch, 16- or 18-gauge needle is used for I.P. shots, and is thrust directly into the fossa at an angle perpendicular to the critter’s body.

BE CAUTIOUS: Some I.P. medications can—in extreme cases—be toxic enough to cause peritonitis. All fluids given in this manner should be warmed to body temperature (but no medication or needle should ever be used that is warmer than the temperature of the beast to be treated), and only medicines (or vaccines, etc.) designed for I.P. use should be so administered. If you have any doubts (about this or anything connected with animal injections), check with your vet.

Filling a syringe——————–

• If you have to draw liquid from a new bottle of product into a syringe, you may find it hard to suck out.
• This is because there is no air in the new bottle or container.
• All you need do is to draw into the syringe the amount of air that will be replaced by the injection, and inject this air into the bottle through the rubber cap.
• This will put enough air into the bottle and allow you to fill the syringe.
• You may have to do this every now and again if you find it hard to fill the syringe, or leave a spare needle in the bottle for the air to enter.
• Try to keep everything as clean as possible and free from contamination.

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