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Reabsorption


Cassiegirl
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Has anyone had a bitch reabsorp a litter and then go on to successfully have a subsequent litter? If so, what did you do differently? Did you use a different dog or the same dog? Ideas for prevention of reabsorption in a bitch that has a history of this would be appreciated.

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Years ago my daughter's bitch was pregnant, got to 5 weeks and was showing and then started to look smaller over a couple of days. She had a brown sludge discharge. She was treated with AB's and went on to have a normal litter next season.

My own girl was mated and was in whelp. At the ultrasound at 4 weeks there was 6 puppies that had implanted with 3 in each horn. The repro vet could clearly see that only 4 foetuses were viable and the other 2 had died and there was no heartbeats. She absorbed these puppies and she went on to whelp the remaining 4 puppies. The vet said it was quite common in dogs and unless you ultrasound most would never know that there are frequent losses within a litter while in utero. This was a human grade scanner by the way.

To answer your question yes!

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Has anyone had a bitch reabsorp a litter and then go on to successfully have a subsequent litter? If so, what did you do differently? Did you use a different dog or the same dog? Ideas for prevention of reabsorption in a bitch that has a history of this would be appreciated.

How far along was she when it happened.

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As Rebanne suggested, you need to progesterone test during the pregnancy and supplement with either progesterone tablets or injections if needed. I previously had a bitch who reabsorbed without intervention. With progesterone monitoring and supplementation we had two successful litters ( small litters but success all the same).

Going forward from there we have just had a hassle free pregnancy and litter born from the only daughter of the bitch with fertility problems :)

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it was most likely low progesterone. You need to find a repo vet that can test levels through the pregnancy and if need be support the bitch with meds/injections.

Agree with this. Have a repo vet manage your girl's next pregnancy. They'll do prog tests throughout the pregnancy to keep an eye on levels and she can be given injections if the levels drop. I saved a litter this way

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