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Livestock & Forage
Lamb in turn eyelids
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<blockquote data-quote="Guleesh" data-source="post: 7460652" data-attributes="member: 147187"><p>I can confidently blame most of our entropion cases to one tup we had, and in far too many of them, rubbing or pinching would generally only last for a few hours, If the eyelid keeps inverting and ends up damaging the eye, then injecting is the only option left as the bump on the eye catches the eyelid and rolls it under- making it even harder to correct. </p><p></p><p>Never sprayed anything in the eyes and never had any problems.</p><p></p><p>I don't suppose antibiotics are necessary really, it's a physical problem, not an infection, just makes sense to inject antibiotics rather than some other sterile solution, to protect the wound that the needle has made.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Guleesh, post: 7460652, member: 147187"] I can confidently blame most of our entropion cases to one tup we had, and in far too many of them, rubbing or pinching would generally only last for a few hours, If the eyelid keeps inverting and ends up damaging the eye, then injecting is the only option left as the bump on the eye catches the eyelid and rolls it under- making it even harder to correct. Never sprayed anything in the eyes and never had any problems. I don't suppose antibiotics are necessary really, it's a physical problem, not an infection, just makes sense to inject antibiotics rather than some other sterile solution, to protect the wound that the needle has made. [/QUOTE]
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Lamb in turn eyelids
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