Dystocia: The struggle isn’t over after the pull

By Nathan Upah

If you raise cattle, you likely know about and have dealt with dystocia or calving difficulty. How dystocia is scored and assessed can prove quite variable. 

A study published in 2001 looked at over 650,000 calvings in a 12-year period and determined dystocia rates for heifers and multiparous animals to be 28.7% and 10.7% respectively. Conversely, a NAHMS survey in 2002 reported a 3.7% incidence rate of dystocia for multiparous cows. Both studies are dated, but due the respective scope and size, they provide valuable insight into quantifying calving difficulty. Accurately quantifying dystocia can be further complicated by the intentional observation of calving, which can lead to an increase in aided calving events. With all this considered, it is difficult to precisely quantify how frequently dystocia truly occurs. However, observed or not, the occurrence of dystocia is likely markedly higher than initially thought. 

calf article mom and baby calf

Without a doubt, it is not difficult to extrapolate that calving difficulties and associated events cost the industry millions of dollars in lost production and mortality. The dams’ that experience dystocia have a greater risk of retained placenta, metritis and a greater number of days open in comparison to unaided calving events. Heifer calves born requiring the assistance of mechanical intervention or multiple people were found to have significantly increased risk of scours, respiratory disease and mortality in the first 120 days of life. 

Hypoxia and post-delivery respiration

One of the underlying reasons for this observed heightened risk of calfhood disease is likely due to hypoxia – a shortage of oxygen. When a calf from a difficult birth takes its first breaths, it is not only a great feeling for everyone involved, but it also ends the period of hypoxia. 

Symptoms of hypoxic neonates include a weak to absent suckle reflex, difficulty maintaining sternal recumbency (upright) and requiring more time to stand.

 

There are a variety of things that can be done to help promote respiration post-delivery, including: 

• Clean straw inserted into the nostril
• Pouring ice water on the head  
• Placing calves on their stomachs can help open airways for respiration. 

After the calf is breathing, the common assumption is that this calf is now equivalent to its contemporaries that were delivered without complication. This could not be further from the truth. Seldom is consideration given to what has happened under the surface of that calf, what kind of survival mechanisms were engaged and what the lingering side effects might be. Metabolically, the dystocia calf is not out of the woods after it has been delivered and still has severe life-threatening challenges to overcome. 

Anerobic metabolism and lactic acid buildup

During a normal birth, the calf will exit the womb with about 80% oxygen saturation of the blood and very quickly progresses to 98% to 100% oxygen saturation following its arrival. The dystocia calf by definition will have a greater amount of time between loss of maternal blood supply and successful respiration; this causes blood oxygen levels to drop. This time gap causes the dystocia calf to enter a state of anerobic metabolism; a side effect of this metabolic pathway is a buildup of lactic acid. It is likely a large portion of this lactic acid is contributed by the respiratory system. The buildup of lactic acid causes a change in the blood pH, similar to what could be observed in scouring calves. 

Furthermore, calves with lower blood oxygen levels have an impaired ability to absorb colostral antibodies, thereby heightening the risk of passive transfer failure. This counters a practice that is often observed on farms – calves that appear weak and lethargic are often given colostrum very quickly following birth in an effort to perk them up. Calves born via normal birth should achieve sternal recumbency in two to three minutes and attempt to stand 15 to 30 minutes after delivery. These are both indicators that the calf is oxygenating its blood via respiration and ready to intake colostrum.

Calf Article baby calf

Calves born that experience dystocia likely require longer amounts of time to fully oxygenate their blood due to the deficit created by the prolonged disruption from maternal blood supply and successful respiration. It could also be deduced that colostrum absorption could be improved by slightly delaying colostrum administration, allowing the dystocia calf more time to fully oxygenate. Colostrum absorption wasn’t accounted for in the 2001 study, but it could be a leading factor in explaining the heightened morbidity and mortality observed. 

The window for optimum colostrum absorption is just six to 12 hours following birth. So, delaying colostrum administration is certainly only for a limited time. Allowing dystocia calves time to buffer the acid built up in their blood might not be a luxury they can afford or have the capability to do, especially for weak, lethargic or cold calves.  

Interventions to help overcome the side effects of this lactic acid buildup include:  
      1. Oxygenating the calf via nasal administration of humidified oxygen.  
      2. Tactile stimulation that simulates the mother licking the calf (similar effect to rubbing a leg cramp).  
      3. Offer a respiratory stimulant like caffeine. This tactic is used in human neonatal medicine to help open airways and reduce periods of apnea.  
      4. The administration of IV fluids can also prove beneficial. 

 

The shared advantage all these interventions hold is that they do not require large volumes of material to enter the digestive tract that could possibly interrupt colostrum absorption. 

Dystocia is an inevitable part of raising cattle. Much care is taken from genetic, nutrition and management perspectives to minimize the risk, but it still occurs. In a perfect world, dystocia could be quantitatively diagnosed by blood oxygen levels of the calf and intervention determined thereafter. As it is, management must make a visual judgement call in most if not all cases. Calves that survive dystocia need to be celebrated, but also treated with an understanding that they went through a great metabolic challenge. Those calves need more than our common everyday management to allow them to be more than a statistic of morbidity or mortality. Getting the calf to breathe is foremost, but treating the hypoxia-induced acidosis is just as paramount in putting dystocia calves on the road to success. 

 

Article first published on Progressive Dairy. Read it here