Article
Diagnosing Neonatal Calf Diarrhea: A Practical Stepwise Approach for Veterinarians
Neonatal calf diarrhea remains one of the most common and economically important conditions encountered in bovine practice. Because multiple pathogens can produce similar clinical signs, reaching an accurate diagnosis requires more than identifying diarrhea alone. A systematic approach that combines clinical evaluation, assessment of disease severity, appropriate sample collection, and laboratory support can help veterinarians make informed treatment and herd-level management decisions.
Start with a Thorough Clinical Assessment
A careful history often provides the first diagnostic clues. Important information includes the calf's age, colostrum intake, vaccination status, duration of illness, and the number of affected or deceased calves within the herd.
Age can help narrow the list of likely pathogens. F5 (K99) E. coli is commonly associated with diarrhea in calves younger than 7 days, whereas Cryptosporidium and coccidial infections tend to occur later because of their prepatent periods. Blood in the feces of calves younger than 30 days may raise suspicion for Salmonella or Coronavirus infection, while Cryptosporidium and Clostridium are less common considerations1.
Fecal characteristics can also provide useful clues. Watery diarrhea is commonly associated with E. coli K99+, whereas Salmonella infection may produce watery or mucoid diarrhea containing fibrin and blood2.
Assess Dehydration and Metabolic Acidosis Early
The severity of dehydration has a major influence on prognosis and treatment planning. Clinical indicators include skin elasticity, mucous membrane appearance, and eye position1.
Typical findings include:
- Mild dehydration: slight eyeball recession and mildly prolonged skin tent
- Moderate dehydration: sunken eyes, tacky mucous membranes, and lethargy
- Severe dehydration: markedly sunken eyes, persistent skin tenting, and shock-like signs
- Very severe dehydration: recumbency, loss of consciousness, and near-death presentation
Metabolic acidosis should be assessed alongside dehydration. Changes in posture, behavior, and palpebral reflex provide practical field indicators of acid-base status3. Delayed responses to stimuli, inability to stand, and absent palpebral reflexes may indicate severe acidosis.
Particular attention should be given to calves that are reluctant to stand, have poor suckling reflexes, remain recumbent, or appear depressed and mentally dull1.
Look Beyond the Gastrointestinal Tract
A complete physical examination can reveal systemic involvement. Rectal temperature helps assess disease severity. Fever may suggest infectious disease, while hypothermia is particularly concerning because it may indicate hypoglycemia and severe metabolic compromise.
Examination of mucous membranes can assist in identifying endotoxemia or septicemia. Capillary refill time, mucosal color, scleral vessel dilation, and the presence of hypopyon may provide valuable diagnostic information. Early recognition of these signs supports timely intervention1,4.
Collect Samples Correctly
Even the most advanced laboratory test cannot compensate for poor sample quality.
Fresh fecal samples should ideally be collected using rectal swabs to minimize contamination5. Samples should be transported at 4–8 °C to reduce bacterial overgrowth and maintain pathogen viability. Anaerobic organisms such as Clostridium perfringens require oxygen-free conditions during transport6.
When mortality occurs during outbreaks, freshly dead or euthanized calves can provide valuable diagnostic information. Gastrointestinal tissues, lymph nodes, liver samples, and serum should be collected appropriately for further testing1.
Use Laboratory Findings to Support Clinical Decisions1
Hematological and biochemical findings can help assess disease severity and guide therapy. Common abnormalities include increased urea and creatinine concentrations, glucose disturbances, and metabolic acidosis.
Progressive dehydration is often associated with hyponatremia, hyperkalemia, and hypochloremia. Elevated packed cell volume may indicate significant fluid loss and the need for aggressive correction.
Practical Clinical Takeaway
Successful diagnosis of neonatal calf diarrhea begins long before laboratory results arrive. A structured assessment of age, fecal characteristics, hydration status, metabolic acidosis, systemic involvement, and sample quality can significantly improve diagnostic accuracy. Laboratory testing remains essential for pathogen confirmation, but careful clinical evaluation continues to be the foundation of effective case management.
References
- Sedky D, Ghazy AA, Abou-Zeina HA. Advances in diagnosis of diseases causing diarrhea in newborn calves. Veterinary Research Communications. 2025 Oct;49(5):293. https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/s11259-025-10855-0.pdf
- Muktar Y, Mamo G, Tesfaye B, Belina D. A review on major bacterial causes of calf diarrhea and its diagnostic method. Journal of Veterinary Medicine and Animal Health. 2015 May 31;7(5):173-85. https://academicjournals.org/journal/JVMAH/article-full-text-pdf/31D529A52229.pdf
- Meganck V, Hoflack G, Opsomer G. Advances in prevention and therapy of neonatal dairy calf diarrhoea: a systematical review with emphasis on colostrum management and fluid therapy. Acta Veterinaria Scandinavica. 2014 Nov 25;56(1):75. https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1186/s13028-014-0075-x.pdf
- Ekinci G, Tüfekçi E, Cissé Y, Bekdik İK, Onmaz AC, Aslan Ö, Güneş V, Çitil M, Keleş İ. Chloride and lactate as prognostic indicators of calf diarrhea from eighty-nine cases. Journal of Veterinary Science. 2024 May 7;25(3):e38. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11156601/pdf/jvs-25-e38.pdf
- Su W, Du Y, Lian F, Wu H, Zhang X, Yang W, Duan Y, Pan Y, Liu W, Wu A, Zhao B. Standards for collection, preservation, and transportation of fecal samples in TCM clinical trials. Frontiers in cellular and infection microbiology. 2022 Apr 20;12:783682. https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/cellular-and-infection-microbiology/articles/10.3389/fcimb.2022.783682/pdf
- Ismael E, Kadry M, Hamza DA (2019) The occurrence of Clostridium difficile in different animal species in Egypt. Inter J Vet Sci 8:138–142 http://www.ijvets.com/pdf-files/Volume-8-no-3-2019/138-142.pdf
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