Things You'll Need
- Mouthwash
- Paper towels
- Disposable gloves
- Oxytetracycline 200 mg/ml
- 18-gauge needle
- Gentocin spray
- Triple antibiotic ophthalmic ointment (optional)
- Terramycin ophthalmic ointment (optional)
Instructions
Isolate the goat from the rest of the herd. Place the goat in a small but well-ventilated pen that is cool, dry and shaded from direct sunlight.
Clean below and around the goat's eyes with mouthwash. Wear disposable gloves when doing this. Wet a paper towel with the mouthwash and wipe away any tears around the goat's eyes to help prevent the spread of pinkeye.
Inject the goat with oxytetracycline 200 mg/ml subcutaneously just over its ribs using an 18-gauge needle. Use a dosage of 5 CCs per 100 pounds of body weight. Administer the injection once each day for five consecutive days.
Spray the affected eye with a gentocin spray twice per day for at least three consecutive days. You'll need to get a prescription for the gentocin spray from your veterinarian. Do not use this spray if the eye has ulcerated, meaning the cornea covering the iris has risen from the eyeball.
Apply triple antibiotic ophthalmic ointment to the affected eye twice per day if ulceration has occurred. Triple antibiotic ophthalmic ointment contains neomycin and polymyxin B sulfates and bacitracin zinc ophthalmic ointment, and you'll need to get a prescription for it. Apply the ointment until the ulceration goes away.