Boar goat born with only one nostril

Goatgirl12

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I thought I had seen it all... 5 legged calf, 2 headed calf.... but apparently there is still more. We had triplets born today, the runt died, the biggest one is still with mom, but the other one has something I have never seen before. It's upper jaw is deformed, so it only has one nostril out. The other "nostril" is on the roof of his mouth towards the front... just a small opening. We have tubed him twice and he seems much perkier now. Going to try and get him to nurse a bottle, it is definitely going to be a challenge. Has anyone else ever see anything like this????
 

heatherlynnky

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Looks a bit like wry mouth. I do have a goat who has wry mouth but mine did not look that way at birth. It started really gradual around 8 week and just got worse. She is fine. If they come out with it already twisted i don't know what that would mean. Mine got worse as she grew and finally is pretty stable. I guess it depends if it interferes with eating or breathing at all in the future. Good luck with her.
 

SkyWarrior

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:welcome

Not seen that, but hey, I'm new at the goat kidding thing. Does he have problems breathing? This looks oddly congenital.
 

Renegade

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It's hard to tell from the photo but from your description it sounds like a severe cleft palate. I would have a vet look at it. If it's a cleft palate he will not recover and will eventually inhale milk, water, or food. This will cause pneumonia.
Sorry. Not trying to be mean just honest. I don't want to see the little guy suffer.

Did you deworm the mother at any time during her pregnancy? If so what did you use?

Donna
 

Goatgirl12

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ksalvagno said:
That is wry face. Check out this thread too: http://www.backyardherds.com/forum/viewtopic.php?id=20890

I've seen it quite a bit in alpacas. Unfortunately, he will have to be put down.
Thanks so much for everyone's help. ksalvagno - Thanks so much for the link, that is exactly what he has. He is still alive but he won't nurse at all, his jaw is so malformed. We have tubed him a few times. I think the humane thing to do is put him down. Even if we get him to nurse he is going to have a life of aspiration and probably die of some infection from that down the road. Man, it has been rough kidding season so far. Hope everyone else has had better luck than us!
 

heatherlynnky

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Very very sorry for you and your baby goatgirl. I know how hard that decision can be. I had contacted an expert in wry mouth in Alpaca's who was totally no help and did massive amounts of research. I found nothing too encouraging. I have been lucky that our goat had it so mild but even still she has been pulled from the breeding list. As this little one grows it would probably get worse. You are doing the right thing. Hugs
 
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