PDF download Download Article
Learn how to feel if your cow is pregnant
PDF download Download Article

Rectal palpation is a very common and highly popular method among all cattle producers in primarily performing pregnancy checks on cows and heifers, and also for checking the reproductive organs of a bull during a bull breeding soundness exam. For the purpose of this article, though, the focus is primarily on cows and heifers. "Preg-checking" or pregnancy checking female cattle often yields successful results especially if performed by an experience technician. Rectal palpation is undoubtedly the messiest, yet cheapest and often quickest form of preg-checking that can be easily learned by all those who have a breeding herd of cattle.

  1. Put the female bovine into a squeeze chute or head-gate with gates on either side that prevent her from moving side-to-side.
  2. An OB (obstetrical) suit or coveralls are best for this job. However, if you have old clothes that you don't mind getting dirty, then those will work fine as well.
  3. Put on fingered latex shoulder-length gloves on the one arm (preferably your strongest arm) you will use to do rectal palpation with.
  4. Apply a handful of OB lubricant to your hand, and rub it so that it gets above your hand as well as the inside. [1]
  5. Grab the tail with one hand (the one not gloved up), hold up above your head (see photo above) and with the gloved one, form a kind of closed-puppet mouth configuration with your hand (thumb tip connecting with all four tips of your fingers), and with the point of the top of your fingers forming a 45 to 60 degree angle, push into the rectum of the cow.
    • You will have to push hard because the cow will be straining against you to push you out. Keep your wrist rigid and in-line with the rest of your arm, and keep your elbow flexed slightly so you have enough strength to push into the cow's rectum.
  6. If the rectum is full of feces, then carefully scoop the loose fecal matter with your hand and retract your hand enough so that you can expel the feces for the cow. Expel enough of the feces that you have room enough to work, so you can reach and find the cervix.
  7. It will be below your hand, as will the rest of the female bovine's reproductive tract. You should be able to feel a hard cylindrical shape part of the way in. If you are up to your shoulder in the cow and still can't find the cervix, you're too far in. Move back until you can feel the cylindrical object below your fingers.
  8. If you have short arms, you may either need a stool to stand on, or have to go in right up to your shoulder to feel for anything in the fallopian tubes or uterus of the cow.
  9. If you feel anything that feels like the uterus is distended, with a small oval ball of liquid floating inside it or something that feels like a fetus, then you have found that the cow is bred. If you don't feel anything of the sort, just a uterus, then she may be open (not bred). [2]
    • It takes a lot of practice to know what you're feeling for. Often it's best to preg-check 2 to 5 months into the cow's gestation period, so that you know you are feeling for something larger than a golf-ball sized ovary. The sizes you should be feeling are according to how far along the cow is: [3]
      • 2 months - size of a mouse
      • 3 months - size of a rat
      • 4 months - size of a small cat
      • 5 months - size of a large cat
      • 6 months - size of a small dog
      • 7 months - size of a Beagle
        • These size comparisons are useful if you have a dead premature calf that may have been aborted.
    • A vet or bovine practitioner who has had more experience and has preg-checked more cows will be more accurate than one who has done only a few cows. Thus saying, the more practice you get or the more chances you get to preg-check cows, the more accurate you'll become.
  10. Once you've determined if the cow or heifer is pregnant and how far along, pull your arm out of the cow, and release her back into the herd, and repeat with another cow or heifer.

Community Q&A

Search
Add New Question
  • Question
    Whenever I perform rectal palpation, I can never get my hands on uterine horns, but ovaries are palpated well by indirect approach. How can I find the uterine horns?
    Karin
    Top Answerer
    This isn't going to be very helpful, but you won't be able to find them. The uterine horns are going to be very difficult to find, because they are as soft tissue as the rectal wall. What you're really going to be feeling for is the more harder, denser tissues like the ovaries, the cervix, and the small embryo-turned-fetus. You're doing everything right if you can feel the ovaries and, if you went more shallow, the cervix. The fetus can be felt in the uterine horns, so that's what you're really going to be feeling for, not the uterine horns themselves.
  • Question
    What is the treatment if a cow does not come into full heat rather than it used to be in false heat?
    Karin
    Top Answerer
    There is no treatment available. You just have to wait it out and hope she doesn't abort and ends up keeping her calf to full term. A pregnant cow will have a false heat, but it doesn't necessarily equate to her aborting the calf.
  • Question
    Do I have to go through the rectum to pregnancy check a heifer?
    Cora Provencher
    Community Answer
    You most likely should. If it is a new mom, her vulva won't be as loose as a mom who has had a few calves. To cause the cow less pain, you should preform a rectal examination.
See more answers
Ask a Question

      Video

      Tips

      • Some producers, vets, and your AI instructor will prefer to change gloves in between cows to prevent the spread of reproductive diseases like Trichomoniasis. Often this is a good hygienic practice to adopt to prevent any spread of disease from one cow to another.
      • The best determination of a cow's due date is from keeping good breeding records. If you know when a cow has been bred and if she did become pregnant, then you have a very good idea of when she will give birth.
      • The anus of a cow is located above the vulva, which is a slit below the anus. You need to go into the anus of the cow, not the vulva, to do proper preg-checking.
      Show More Tips
      Submit a Tip
      All tip submissions are carefully reviewed before being published
      Thanks for submitting a tip for review!

      Warnings

      • If you get easily grossed out from things like fresh stinky cow poop or having to rectal palpate your cows, or just even the thought of having to do it, then don't do it. Get a large-animal vet to do it for you.
      • Don't pull out too fast, otherwise you will end up with a pile of cow manure all over you. Pull out slow and easy, allowing the anus to naturally close on its own as you pull out.
      • Spreading your fingers in the rectum may cause damage to the rectal wall which is deadly for the cow in most cases.
      • Some cows may be a bit less tolerant you sticking your arm up their rear than others. You may get kicked, or the cow may suddenly decide she wants to move around or go down with you still inside her. Try to move with her as best as you can, but there will be risk for pulling a muscle in your arm or even breaking your arm if things really get out of hand.
      • Make sure you're going in the right "hole." If you go in the vulva, you could potentially cause an abortion since you may have taken away the cervical plug, or palpated the fetus a little too much.
        • Too vigorous a palpation through the rectal wall may cause abortions or the death of a fetus. You could sever the connection between the placenta and uterine wall, cutting off the fetus's life-giving connection between it and the dam. Be firm yet gentle, and do not be too aggressive with your actions.

      Things You'll Need

      • Shoulder length latex fingered gloves (have a pack of over 100 if necessary)
      • Coveralls or OB suit (especially if you don't want to get your clothes dirty)
      • OB lube
      • Head-gate with squeeze chute
      • Cows/heifers that need preg-checking

      About This Article

      Thanks to all authors for creating a page that has been read 286,747 times.

      Reader Success Stories

      • Teri Brown

        Nov 7, 2017

        "Month to month fetus size comparisons are very helpful in determining the pregnancy progression. Thank you! The ..." more
      Share your story

      Did this article help you?