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Medicine and Surgery of Camelids


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alt="Photo depicts photo demonstrating trimming of an alpaca's toenails while it is standing on the ground."/>

      When you put something sharp into an animal, it is likely that it is going to move. With this assumption, most people restrain the animal before they inject. The fallacy with this approach is the restraint causes the animal to fight before the needle touches the skin.

       Use a holster that fits on the lower leg. This allows you to retrieve your nippers without moving very much. A lot of movement attempting to get nippers out of a pocket will likely take the animal out of balance.

       Trim very conservatively at first – we all quick an animal now and again but you don't want it to be the first time the animal is trimmed.

       Allow the llama or alpaca to put his foot down a few times during the trimming process if he needs to. The more practice he gets picking up his foot and getting it back the better off you both are.

       Trim toenails after a rain. The toenails are much easier when they are moist. If you live in a dry climate, wet down a small area and keep the animals in this area for a few minutes before trimming.

       Don't be reluctant to use a sedative for really difficult animals if you need to. Wrestling to trim toenails makes the process more traumatic and only teaches the animal to resist more.

       There is less movement

       The movement is less violent, less erratic and more predictable

       The animal stays calm

       The muscles are not tight

       There is less likelihood of abscess

       It is faster and easier

       One can work alone, saving time, labor and makes the patient feel safer

      Crowding the animals slows them down and they feel safer in a group. If you are giving injections to one animal, it is still useful to pack the pen with others; the patient will be much more cooperative with company and the other animals will help facilitate the injection process. The animals in a group pen are less reactive and do not kick or lie down as much. If there is an animal that is known to spit readily, the author recommends treating that animal first and then allowing it to leave.

Schematic illustration of proper location for giving a subcutaneous and intramuscular injection.

      Working Alone

      Working with an Assistant