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Stooling in Weaner Pigs. What Is True, What Is Risky, and What Actually Works - Printable Version +- FarmersJoint.com (http://farmersjoint.com) +-- Forum: Animal Forums (http://farmersjoint.com/forum-4.html) +--- Forum: Livestock Farming (http://farmersjoint.com/forum-5.html) +--- Thread: Stooling in Weaner Pigs. What Is True, What Is Risky, and What Actually Works (/thread-31379.html) |
Stooling in Weaner Pigs. What Is True, What Is Risky, and What Actually Works - Henlus - 01-02-2026 I want to clarify some common advice going around about stooling (diarrhea) in weaner pigs, especially the use of Sulphanor, tetracycline, Flagyl, and LA injections. This is important because wrong treatment can worsen losses. 1. Is stooling in weaners normal? Yes. Stooling in weaners is very common, especially after:
2. Are Sulphanor, tetracycline, or Flagyl the drug of choice? No. They are not first-line treatments unless the cause is confirmed. Blind use of antibiotics can:
3. What about LA injection (Oxytetracycline LA)? Oxytetracycline LA can help only if the diarrhea is bacterial. However, the advice “give 1 ml every 72 hours” is risky because:
4. What is missing in most advice Most people skip the most important steps:
5. Feed-related issue (very important) Heavy PKC-based diets can cause diarrhea in weaners. Weaners have sensitive guts. Too much PKC, sudden feed changes, or poor mixing can trigger stooling even without infection. 6. Safer general approach to weaner diarrhea
Conclusion The advice to just inject LA and wait is partly true but incomplete and risky if followed blindly. Successful control of weaner diarrhea requires:
RE: Stooling in Weaner Pigs. What Is True, What Is Risky, and What Actually Works - Henlus - 01-02-2026 You can know if weaner pigs have fever in two ways: accurate method and field signs. 1. Accurate way (best method) Use a digital thermometer (rectal). Normal temperature for pigs: 38.7°C – 39.8°C How to check:
2. Signs of fever (when no thermometer is available) These signs together suggest fever:
3. Fever vs feed-related diarrhea This is very important.
4. What to do if fever is confirmed
Summary The thermometer is the most reliable method. Touch and behavior help, but they are not 100 percent accurate. Always confirm fever before jumping to antibiotics. RE: Stooling in Weaner Pigs. What Is True, What Is Risky, and What Actually Works - Farm-ninja - 01-15-2026 I like how housing conditions were mentioned. Wet floors, cold nights, and poor ventilation can trigger stooling even with good feed. Drugs alone cannot fix bad housing. If you see many pig farms ehh? Their floors are covered with shit and water. RE: Stooling in Weaner Pigs. What Is True, What Is Risky, and What Actually Works - ZeroWaste - 01-15-2026 The explanation of why Flagyl and tetracycline are often misused is very important. These drugs are not magic solutions. Using them blindly damages gut bacteria and sometimes worsens diarrhea instead of stopping it. RE: Stooling in Weaner Pigs. What Is True, What Is Risky, and What Actually Works - Trimex - 01-15-2026 This explanation is very accurate and practical. Many farmers assume any stooling must be infection, but the separation between diarrhea with fever and diarrhea without fever is very important. Once you start checking temperature first, drug cost dropped and survival improved. RE: Stooling in Weaner Pigs. What Is True, What Is Risky, and What Actually Works - John@ - 01-15-2026 Using a thermometer should be standard practice in pig farming. Touching ears and belly alone can be misleading, especially in hot weather. This alone can prevent wasting antibiotics on non-infectious cases. But unfortunately, most pig farmers I know don't have thermometer which is very cheap. RE: Stooling in Weaner Pigs. What Is True, What Is Risky, and What Actually Works - Ekene - 01-15-2026 The clarification that stooling in weaners can be normal under stress is very helpful. Weaning alone is a big shock to piglets, and if feed and housing are not well managed, diarrhea will show up even in healthy pigs. RE: Stooling in Weaner Pigs. What Is True, What Is Risky, and What Actually Works - Donk - 01-15-2026 Electrolytes are life-saving during diarrhea. Many pigs do not die from the disease itself but from dehydration. Farmers who skip electrolytes are setting their pigs up for losses even when antibiotics are used. RE: Stooling in Weaner Pigs. What Is True, What Is Risky, and What Actually Works - Suarus - 01-15-2026 Advising fixed drug doses like “1 ml every 72 hours” is dangerous. Pigs vary in size, and overdosing or underdosing can either kill the pig or fail to treat the problem. Weight-based dosing should always be emphasized. RE: Stooling in Weaner Pigs. What Is True, What Is Risky, and What Actually Works - Hilux - 01-16-2026 The suggestion to withdraw feed temporarily is something many farmers resist, but it works. Giving the gut time to rest while providing water and electrolytes often brings improvement within 24 hours. RE: Stooling in Weaner Pigs. What Is True, What Is Risky, and What Actually Works - Hunter - 01-16-2026 Fever checking across multiple pigs is a good practice. One pig with fever does not mean the whole pen needs antibiotics. Treating only confirmed cases saves money and reduces antibiotic resistance. RE: Stooling in Weaner Pigs. What Is True, What Is Risky, and What Actually Works - EcoFarm - 01-17-2026 The temperature range provided is very useful, especially for beginners. Many farmers do not even know what normal pig temperature is, so everything feels like fever to them. The difference between mild temperature rise and true fever is well explained. Not every slight increase requires antibiotics, especially during hot weather or stress periods. The signs listed for fever without a thermometer are realistic. Huddling, dullness, and appetite loss together are stronger indicators than just touching the ears. RE: Stooling in Weaner Pigs. What Is True, What Is Risky, and What Actually Works - FarmLady - 01-17-2026 Probiotics after antibiotics are often ignored, yet they help pigs recover faster and return to feed. This should be part of every treatment plan, not an afterthought. RE: Stooling in Weaner Pigs. What Is True, What Is Risky, and What Actually Works - The Farmer - 01-18-2026 This post explains why some treatments “fail” even when good drugs are used. If dehydration, feed, and environment are not corrected, no antibiotic will perform miracles. Antibiotic resistance is becoming a serious issue in pig farming. Posts like this help farmers understand when drugs are truly necessary and when management is the real solution. I also like that this advice does not reject drugs completely but puts them in the right place. When fever and infection are present, treatment is justified, but it must be correct. RE: Stooling in Weaner Pigs. What Is True, What Is Risky, and What Actually Works - GreenVet - 01-19-2026 Many losses in weaners happen in the first week after weaning. This discussion highlights exactly what to focus on during that critical period: warmth, feed quality, and hydration. RE: Stooling in Weaner Pigs. What Is True, What Is Risky, and What Actually Works - YoungAgropreneur - 01-20-2026 Farmers should save this discussion. It answers questions that come up repeatedly about weaner diarrhea and saves people from costly trial-and-error treatments. |