Dehydrated Calves
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Dehydrated Calves: How to Assess, Calculate Fluids, and Treat Scours Effectively
By Dr Duncan Houston
Dehydration is one of the most common and most dangerous problems in calves, especially during scours. The infection itself is rarely what kills the calf. It is fluid loss, electrolyte imbalance, and acidosis that lead to collapse.
The critical mistake is not recognising how dehydrated a calf really is, or delaying the correct type of fluid therapy.
This guide explains how to assess dehydration accurately on-farm, how to calculate fluid requirements properly, and when to use oral versus intravenous therapy to prevent avoidable losses.
Quick Answer
Dehydrated calves should be assessed using eyeball recession rather than skin tenting. Fluid needs can be calculated using body weight and percentage dehydration. Calves under about 8 percent dehydration can often be treated with oral electrolytes, while more severe cases require intravenous fluids. If a calf is weak, not drinking, or unable to stand, treat it as urgent and escalate immediately.
Why Dehydration Is the Real Problem in Scours
When calves develop diarrhea, they lose:
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Water
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Sodium
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Chloride
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Bicarbonate reserves
This leads to:
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Reduced blood volume
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Weakness
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Acidosis
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Reduced gut function
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Collapse if untreated
Clinical Insight
In practice, calves often look reasonably alert early on. By the time they are visibly depressed or recumbent, dehydration and acidosis are already advanced. Early intervention is what saves calves.
How to Assess Dehydration Accurately
Why Skin Tenting Is Unreliable
Skin tenting is commonly used but often inaccurate, especially when assessed over the shoulders or back. It can underestimate dehydration and delay appropriate treatment.
Eyeball Recession: The Most Useful On-Farm Tool
The most reliable field method is assessing eyeball recession at the medial canthus.
What to look for:
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The degree the eye has sunk back into the orbit
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Measured visually in millimetres
How to Interpret It
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Mild recession: early dehydration
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Moderate recession: significant fluid loss
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Marked recession: severe dehydration
A practical guide:
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Around 4 mm recession is roughly 8 percent dehydration
Decision Checkpoint
If eyeball recession is approaching moderate levels, do not delay treatment. If it is marked, oral fluids alone are unlikely to be enough.
Calculating Fluid Requirements Properly
Fluid therapy should not be guesswork.
Formula
Fluid requirement (mL) = body weight (kg) × percent dehydration × 10
Example
50 kg calf at 8 percent dehydration:
50 × 8 × 10 = 4,000 mL
That is 4 litres required to correct the deficit
What This Means
This calculation gives you:
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The fluid deficit
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Not ongoing losses
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Not maintenance requirements
Additional fluids will still be needed depending on severity and response.
Clinical Insight
Underestimating fluid requirements is one of the most common reasons calves fail to recover properly.
Oral vs Intravenous Fluid Therapy
When Oral Fluids Are Appropriate
Oral electrolytes are suitable when:
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Dehydration is mild to moderate
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The calf is still standing
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The calf has a suckle reflex
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The calf can swallow or tolerate tubing
How to Use Oral Fluids
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Use a high-quality electrolyte solution
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Ensure adequate sodium content
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Continue milk feeding
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Feed electrolytes between milk feeds
Repeat dosing as needed based on dehydration and response.
When to Switch to IV Fluids
Intravenous fluids are required when:
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Dehydration exceeds roughly 8 percent
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The calf is weak or recumbent
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There is no suckle reflex
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The calf is not drinking
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Signs of shock are present
What Severe Cases Often Include
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Hypoglycemia
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Severe acidosis
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Poor circulation
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Reduced responsiveness
These calves require:
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Rapid fluid replacement
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Electrolyte correction
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Energy support
Decision Checkpoint
If a calf cannot stand or suckle, oral therapy is not enough. Escalate immediately.
Do Not Stop Milk Feeding
One of the most damaging mistakes is removing milk during scours.
Milk provides:
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Energy
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Protein
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Support for recovery
Electrolytes alone cannot sustain a calf.
Correct Feeding Strategy
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Continue milk or milk replacer
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Feed electrolytes separately
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Space feeds by 2 to 3 hours
Clinical Insight
Calves that continue receiving milk recover faster and maintain better growth than those placed on electrolyte-only programs.
Severity Framework: How Dehydrated Is the Calf?
Mild Dehydration
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Slight eyeball recession
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Normal or slightly reduced activity
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Still drinking
Treat with oral electrolytes and monitor.
Moderate Dehydration
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Clear eyeball recession
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Reduced appetite
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Slower movement
Increase oral fluids and monitor closely.
Severe Dehydration
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Marked eyeball recession
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Weakness
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Reduced or absent suckle
Requires intravenous fluids.
Critical
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Recumbent
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Unresponsive
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Severe acidosis signs
Emergency treatment required immediately.
When Is This an Emergency?
Seek urgent veterinary intervention if:
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The calf cannot stand
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There is no suckle reflex
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Eyes are significantly sunken
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The calf is cold or unresponsive
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There is rapid deterioration
Delays here significantly reduce survival.
What Should You Do Right Now?
If you suspect dehydration:
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Assess eyeball recession
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Estimate percent dehydration
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Calculate fluid requirements
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Start oral electrolytes if appropriate
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Continue milk feeding
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Monitor response over the next 6 to 12 hours
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Escalate if there is no improvement
Time-Based Guidance
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Mild cases: reassess within 12 hours
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Moderate cases: reassess within 6 to 12 hours
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Severe cases: act immediately
Common Mistakes in Treating Dehydrated Calves
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Relying on skin tenting alone
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Underestimating fluid deficits
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Delaying treatment
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Using oral fluids in calves that need IV therapy
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Stopping milk feeding
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Not reassessing after treatment
These are the most common reasons calves fail to respond.
How to Prevent Dehydration Losses
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Monitor calves daily for early scours
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Start electrolytes early
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Maintain hygiene in housing
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Ensure adequate colostrum intake initially
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Train staff to assess dehydration correctly
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Have clear treatment protocols ready
Prevention and early treatment are far more effective than late intervention.
FAQs
Is skin tenting reliable in calves?
Not consistently. Eyeball recession is generally more reliable for assessing dehydration.
How do I know if a calf needs IV fluids?
If it is weak, not drinking, or severely dehydrated, IV fluids are required.
Should I stop milk during scours?
No. Continue milk feeding alongside electrolytes.
How often should I give electrolytes?
Frequency depends on severity, but moderate cases often need repeated dosing throughout the day.
Can calves recover from dehydration?
Yes, if treated early and correctly. Delayed treatment reduces survival and performance.
Final Thoughts
Dehydration is one of the most preventable causes of calf loss.
The key factors are:
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accurate assessment
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correct fluid calculation
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appropriate choice of therapy
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early intervention
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ongoing monitoring
Most calves do not suddenly collapse. They decline over hours to days.
The earlier you act, the easier it is to reverse.
If you want help training staff, refining fluid protocols, or deciding when to escalate from oral to IV therapy, ASK A VET™ can support you before dehydration becomes life-threatening.