# Paralytic ileus in 57 cows – symptoms, diagnosis and treatment

**Authors:** Ueli Braun, Christian Gerspach, Rahel Scheiwiller, Monika Hilbe, Karl Nuss

PMC · DOI: 10.1186/s13028-025-00817-6 · Acta Veterinaria Scandinavica · 2025-06-11

## TL;DR

This study examines the symptoms, diagnosis, and treatment outcomes of paralytic ileus in 57 cows, showing most recovered with proper care.

## Contribution

The study provides a detailed retrospective analysis of clinical features and treatment outcomes in cows with paralytic ileus.

## Key findings

- Most cows showed reduced intestinal and rumen motility, with high rates of hypokalaemia and hypocalcaemia.
- Ultrasonography revealed dilated small intestines with reduced motility in 50 cows.
- 94.7% of cows were discharged after treatment, indicating a good prognosis with adequate care.

## Abstract

Paralytic ileus (PI) also known as functional ileus or adynamic ileus occurs when intestinal motor activity is impaired. Cessation of ingesta passage leads to the accumulation of fluid and gas causing intestinal dilatation. With this type of ileus, intestinal transit is functionally impaired in the absence of a physical obstruction. The present retrospective study describes the diagnosis, treatment and outcome of 57 cows with PI.

Colic occurred in 43.9% of the cows, and intestinal and rumen motility was reduced or absent in 92.9% (52/56) and 82.5% (47/57) of the cows, respectively. Ballottement and/or percussion and simultaneous auscultation on the right were also positive in 82.5% of the cows. Faecal output was minimal or absent in 94.7% (54/57) of the cows, and dilated small intestines and occasionally large intestines were palpated transrectally in 57.1% (32/56). The principal laboratory abnormalities were hypokalaemia (89.4%, 51/57), hypocalcaemia (87.5%, 35/40), hypermagnesaemia (77.5%, 31/40), positive base excess (57.4%, 27/47), acidosis (55.3%, 26/47) and hypercapnia (53.2%, 25/47). Ultrasonography in 50 cows revealed dilated small intestines with reduced or absent motility. Eleven cows had received medical treatment alone, 45 had undergone right flank laparotomy and one was euthanized immediately after clinical examination. Fifty-four (94.7%) cows were discharged and three (5.3%) were euthanized.

Paralytic and mechanical ileus are difficult to differentiate using non-invasive methods, which impacts treatment decisions. The prognosis of cattle with PI is good with adequate treatment.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** paralytic ileus (MONDO:0004568)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Paralytic (MESH:D000092164), hypercapnia (MESH:D006935), acidosis (MESH:D000138), adynamic ileus (MESH:D045823), PI (MESH:D007418)
- **Species:** Bos taurus (bovine, species) [taxon 9913]

## Full text

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## Figures

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12160360