This disease is a severe acute abdomen in cattle, and if misdiagnosed or improperly treated, it often leads to death.
In the early stages of intussusception, when the intussusception is incomplete, a high-pressure warm water enema can be attempted for repositioning.
However, due to varying degrees of congestion and edema in the intussuscepted intestinal segments, the warm water enema method often fails, and surgical intervention is necessary.
Originally, this kind of surgery wasn't considered very complicated.
About one or two hours.
For someone like him, it's estimated to take at most an hour to complete.
But this particular cow's surgery was extremely complex; the intussusception caused severe intestinal ischemia, necrosis, and perforation. Typically, a veterinarian might take five or six hours for an entire surgery, and even at his speed, it would take over two hours.
To be honest.
When he saw the symptoms of this cow, he initially wanted to give up.
