aggieterpkatie
The Shepherd
- Joined
- Oct 23, 2009
- Messages
- 3,696
- Reaction score
- 11
- Points
- 156
I am very sorry to hear about your troubles with CAE, DonnaBelle. I don't mean to take anything away from your post, and it truly sad you're having such difficulties with it. Perhaps the person who sold you the goats didn't know about them being positive? Unless your one positive doe is the mother of all the other ones, I seriously doubt she passed CAE to them just living in the herd with them.
I have a slightly differing opinion of CAE. It CAN be managed, but some animals handle the disease differently. I don't like the disease, and I don't think people should knowingly let CAE+ animals raise their kids, since it is so easy to prevent. I did freak out big time when I found out my original doe was CAE+. I thought it was the end of the world. My doe is asymptomatic, and her dam lived to be 13 and was also asymptomatic. Not all animals who are positive (or test positive) show signs, which is why some people don't do anything to try to eradicate it.
I pull all kids from my positive doe at birth, and I currently own her 2 year old daughter who is CAE-. They are housed together, and I've never had a problem. If my doe were to ever show signs of the disease that would cause her pain, I would have her euthanized and not sell her to be someone else's problem.
Not everyone knows to test for the disease, and we all need to do our own due diligence when purchasing animals. I didn't know about it when I first got my doe, but now I do.
Straw Hat Kikos, I do believe you're misinformed about CAE being transmitted through all body fluids. If that were the case, then pulling kids at birth and feeding pasteurized colostrum and milk would be a moot point, since it would have been transferred to the kids invitro. Colostrum/milk is currently the only known cause of transmission, but people speculate and sometimes pass on incorrect information.
CL, IMO is worse than CAE because it is zoonotic (which means it IS transferrable to humans), and it damages meat and milk, and many times can go unnoticed if abcesses are internal. CL does not just "give you a rash for a few days". Here's an article on a study done on humans with lymphadenitis. http://cid.oxfordjournals.org/content/24/2/185.full.pdf It's also MUCH, MUCH easier for animals to pass along CL than it is to pass along CAE.
I do believe all positive animals should have their kids pulled at birth in order to prevent the spread of the disease. It's easy to do, and it works. It's up to the buyer to inquire about health testing, because most people who have CAE+ goats don't even know it.
I have a slightly differing opinion of CAE. It CAN be managed, but some animals handle the disease differently. I don't like the disease, and I don't think people should knowingly let CAE+ animals raise their kids, since it is so easy to prevent. I did freak out big time when I found out my original doe was CAE+. I thought it was the end of the world. My doe is asymptomatic, and her dam lived to be 13 and was also asymptomatic. Not all animals who are positive (or test positive) show signs, which is why some people don't do anything to try to eradicate it.
I pull all kids from my positive doe at birth, and I currently own her 2 year old daughter who is CAE-. They are housed together, and I've never had a problem. If my doe were to ever show signs of the disease that would cause her pain, I would have her euthanized and not sell her to be someone else's problem.
Not everyone knows to test for the disease, and we all need to do our own due diligence when purchasing animals. I didn't know about it when I first got my doe, but now I do.
Straw Hat Kikos, I do believe you're misinformed about CAE being transmitted through all body fluids. If that were the case, then pulling kids at birth and feeding pasteurized colostrum and milk would be a moot point, since it would have been transferred to the kids invitro. Colostrum/milk is currently the only known cause of transmission, but people speculate and sometimes pass on incorrect information.
CL, IMO is worse than CAE because it is zoonotic (which means it IS transferrable to humans), and it damages meat and milk, and many times can go unnoticed if abcesses are internal. CL does not just "give you a rash for a few days". Here's an article on a study done on humans with lymphadenitis. http://cid.oxfordjournals.org/content/24/2/185.full.pdf It's also MUCH, MUCH easier for animals to pass along CL than it is to pass along CAE.
I do believe all positive animals should have their kids pulled at birth in order to prevent the spread of the disease. It's easy to do, and it works. It's up to the buyer to inquire about health testing, because most people who have CAE+ goats don't even know it.