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A two-year-old South Devon ewe, at second lambing, belonging to a South Devon flock, was presented with poor cervical dilation at lambing. The ewe did not have a history of dystocia. Gentle manual dilation was performed for forty minutes by the farmer before veterinary intervention was sought.
On examination, the patient was not showing any signs of straining or labour. The vulva was normally dilated. Vaginal palpation revealed a thickened cervix with obvious corrugations, presenting an intracervical dilation space of about two centimetres. A diagnosis of poor cervical dilation was made.
Poor cervical dilation is a common problem of the lambing sheep, causing dystocia and reduced lamb survival. Many treatments have been proposed with no confirmed efficacy and a caesarian is often required to deliver the lambs. Acupuncture has been shown to dilate the cervix and is often used in human obstetrics. In this case, a single acupuncture treatment using points Yao Bai Hui, BL 30 and BL 31-34 was used. The points were stimulated for 30 minutes.
The cervix started dilating soon after the beginning of the acupuncture treatment. After approximately thirty minutes of needle stimulation and gentle hand massage, the cervix was completely dilated and allowed the delivery of two live lambs. The first was delivered by gentle hand traction and the second was delivered naturally by the ewe soon after. No other intervention was required and no drugs were administered. The placenta was passed several hours later.
Veterinary Acupuncture is an expanding field with more veterinarians taking up an intense 18-month post-graduate training program with weekly online lectures and three practical face-to-face hands-on workshops throughout the course, to qualify for the International Veterinary Acupuncture Society (IVAS) Certification in Veterinary Acupuncture. Find out more about the Australian College of Veterinary Acupuncture HERE.
How veterinary acupuncture successfully treated Fluffy, the over-grooming cat by Dr Ulrike Wurth
Acupuncture for Chronic Epiphora in a Cat – Case Study By Dr Ulrike Wurth
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