The short answer is, you don't; mature horses with broken weight-bearing leg bones do not heal well (or at all), are generally in excruciating amounts of pain and are often a danger to themselves or their handlers because they panic due to being restrained. However, a young foal (6 months old or younger) with a greenstick fracture or a fracture of a non-weight-bearing bone may be able to have the fracture reduced and tolerate corrective equipment (cast, splint, etc.) until the bone heals.
This is where the folk wisdom of shooting (ie, mercy killing) a horse with a broken leg comes from: there is little that can be done to keep the horse safe, comfortable and immobile for the months it would take for the bone to heal up enough to support the animal's weight.
I have seen this tried, on a six year old Arabian stallion with a compound open fracture of the proximal radius. He freaked out when put into a body sling to help support his weight and broke an equine vet resident's ribs. He had multiple surgeries to realign the bone fragments, put antibiotics into the break site to prevent bone infection, pull out dead bone fragments and put transverse supporting pins through the distal humerus. The owner spent over $10,000 on surgeries, X-rays, hospitalization and daily care, the break never healed and the stallion was eventually euthanized.
You treat according to what illness the calf has. You can't treat a calf just to treat a calf, there has to be a reason you're treating it.
The Broken Jaw was created in 1997.
If a jaw is broken, the best thing is to see a doctor and fix it.
No, a fracter jaw is not the same as a broken jaw. A fracter jaw is a condition in which the jaw joint becomes permanently dislocated, while a broken jaw refers to a fracture or break in the jaw bone. Both conditions require medical attention.
no
If no efforts are done to treat the calf immediately, it will die.
no because your jaw is broken.
go to a vet
It's broken
Plaster it
The medical term for a broken jaw is "mandibular fracture." It refers to a break in the bone that makes up the lower jaw. Treatment usually involves stabilizing the jaw, and in severe cases, surgery may be required.
lord hanuman