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A pilot study on surgical trimming impact on severely overgrown
claws in sheep: Behavioral, physiological, and ruminal function
aspects

مؤلف البحث
Ahmed Ibrahim a,*, Usama T. Mahmoudb, Nasser S. Abou Khalil c, Hussein A. Hussein d,Magda M. Ali a
ملخص البحث

Overgrown claws make walking painful, increase difficulty in finding food, and increase susceptibility to
foot problems. This study highlights the effect of surgical claw trimming on the behavior, physiological
indices, and ruminal activity of sheep. Twenty sheep that had severe claw overgrowth were divided into
2 groups: the trimmed group (T), subjected to the process of claw trimming, and the overgrown claw
group, the control group (C). Claw morphometric measurements (toe length, claw height, sole length,
sole width, heel height, dorsal hoof angle, fetlock angle, and dew claws length), gait analysis, behavioral
patterns (feeding, rumination, drinking, standing, walking, and resting), hematological and blood
biochemical indices (complete blood count, plasma cortisol, glucose, lactate, copper, and tumor necrosis
factorea levels), and ruminal function tests (ruminal PH, and count and activity of ruminal fauna) were
evaluated in both groups. The overgrown claw trimming improved sheep behavior, gait scoring, physiological
indicators, and ruminal activity.

مجلة البحث
Journal of Veterinary Behavior
المشارك في البحث
الناشر
Elsevier Inc.
تصنيف البحث
1
عدد البحث
23
موقع البحث
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jveb.2017.10.011
سنة البحث
2018
صفحات البحث
66-75