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Topic:Fertility

Fertility in horses encompasses the physiological processes and factors influencing reproductive success in equine species. It involves the study of reproductive anatomy, endocrinology, and behavior, as well as the management practices that affect breeding outcomes. Key aspects include the estrous cycle, conception rates, and factors impacting stallion and mare fertility. Reproductive technologies such as artificial insemination, embryo transfer, and hormonal therapies are also explored to enhance breeding efficiency. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that examine the biological mechanisms, management strategies, and technological advancements related to equine fertility.
Equine oocyte in vitro maturation: influences of sera, time, and hormones.
Molecular reproduction and development    December 1, 1991   Volume 30, Issue 4 360-368 doi: 10.1002/mrd.1080300411
Willis P, Caudle AB, Fayrer-Hosken RA.Objectives of the present research were to determine the influences of types of media, sera, time and hormones on equine oocyte in vitro maturation (IVM). The following types of media and sera were evaluated: Menezo's B2 medium (B2), modified Tissue Culture Medium 199 (TCM), Defined Medium (DM), fetal calf serum (FCS), mare serum collected on the first day of estrus (MS), and mare serum collected on the day of ovulation (MSO). Resultant oocyte maturation was compared with the control: DM with bovine serum albumin (BSA). Effect of culture time (0, 15, and 32 hr) and the following hormones on oo...
Quantifying the occurrence of early embryonic mortality on three equine breeding farms.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    November 1, 1991   Volume 32, Issue 11 665-672 
Meyers PJ, Bonnett BN, McKee SL.This prospective field study was designed to describe the incidence of early embryonic mortality (EEM) and factors associated with the cause of EEM on three equine breeding farms in Ontario during the 1989 breeding season. Early embryonic mortality was defined as the loss of a single embryo during the first 40 days of pregnancy (day 0 = day of ovulation or last breeding). Pregnancy diagnoses and subsequent embryonic losses were observed by serial trans-rectal ultrasonography between days 12-20 (PD1) and 21-30 (PD2), and by trans-rectal ultrasonography or palpation per rectum between days 31-40...
Time of embryo transport through the mare oviduct.
Theriogenology    November 1, 1991   Volume 36, Issue 5 823-830 doi: 10.1016/0093-691x(91)90348-h
Freeman DA, Weber JA, Geary RT, Woods GL.The objectives of this study were 1) to determine the time of embryo transport through the mare oviduct, 2) to determine whether equine embryos increase in diameter prior to the time of oviductal transport, and 3) to assess the stage of equine embryonic development at the time of oviductal transport. The time of oviductal transport (interval from ovulation to uterine entry) was estimated by collecting embryos from the mare oviduct or uterus at 2-hour intervals from 120 to 168 h postovulation. The time of oviductal transport was 130 to 142 h, since 9 9 embryos were located in the oviduct from 1...
Common horse sense.
Scientific American    October 1, 1991   Volume 265, Issue 4 12 
Heinrich B.This research article corrects a common misconception about the energy metabolism in horses during short sprinting and long-distance running events, emphasizing that short sprints are primarily powered by anaerobic activity, […]
Horse and marmoset monkey sperm bind to the zona pellucida of salt-stored human oocytes.
Fertility and sterility    October 1, 1991   Volume 56, Issue 4 764-767 doi: 10.1016/s0015-0282(16)54612-3
Liu DY, Lopata A, Pantke P, Baker HW.The present study demonstrates that horse and marmoset monkey sperm can bind to the human zona of salt-stored oocytes that failed to fertilize in vitro. Marmoset monkey sperm are also able to penetrate the salt-stored human zona. In contrast, human sperm do not bind to the zona of either horse or marmoset monkey oocytes. These results suggest that human sperm binding to the zona pellucida is more strictly species-specific than it is for horse and marmoset monkey sperm. In contrast, horse and marmoset monkey sperm contain receptors recognized by the human zona.
Use of manual stimulation for collection of semen from an atactic stallion unable to mount.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    September 15, 1991   Volume 199, Issue 6 753-754 
McDonnell SM, Pozor MA, Beech J, Sweeney RW.A 9-year-old atactic breeding stallion was trained to ejaculate, with only manual stimulation, while standing on the ground. Ejaculates obtained yielded fertile semen with morphologic and motility characteristics within the range for normal stallions. This method extended the breeding life of a stallion unable to mount a live or dummy mare or to ejaculate into an artificial vagina while standing on the ground.
Analysis of post-partum fertility in mares on a thoroughbred stud in southern Victoria.
Australian veterinary journal    September 1, 1991   Volume 68, Issue 9 304-306 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1991.tb03265.x
Lowis TC, Hyland JH.This project surveys the reproductive performance of 154 foaling Thoroughbred mares on a commercial stud in southern Victoria. Of these, 96 were served on foal heat (FHS) and 58 were served at a subsequent prostaglandin-induced oestrus (PGS). The PGS group of mares performed more favourably in all aspects except the foaling-to-conception interval where there was a 9.4 day advantage to the FHS group. The first service conception rate in the FHS group was 47.9% compared with 55.2% in PGS mares. Second heat period conception rates were 46% vs 57.7% for FHS and PGS mares, respectively. Overall con...
[Survey of the reproductive features and insemination/mating results in full blood Arabian and Haflinger mare herds on stud farms in west and middle Anatolia].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    September 1, 1991   Volume 98, Issue 9 350-352 
Tekin N, Yurdaydin N, Klug E, Yavas Y, Aksu A, Gülyüz F.Within a German-Turkish university partnership documentation of reproductive data of brood-mares was performed as a part project of the cooperation contract. In the study Arab, Haflinger and cross-breed mares were included. The mares mainly were housed in big studfarms and a smaller part was kept under small private farms. Almost three quarters of both the Arab and Haflinger mares exhibited an estrous length of 1-4 days, whereas the others showed a heat duration of a period of 5-10 days. In the same group of probands a mean length of sexual cycle of 18-24 days could be observed in 38.2% of the...
[Postcoital uterine microbe colonization and endometritis in the mare].
Tierarztliche Praxis    August 1, 1991   Volume 19, Issue 4 381-385 
Büchi S, Waelchli RO, Corboz L, Gygax AP, Wälti RJ.In the mare, natural breeding is associated with bacterial contamination of the reproductive tract. The purpose of this study was to examine postcoital bacterial contamination and the resulting inflammatory response of the uterus. Uterine swabs for bacteriological and cytological examination were obtained from 80 mares. Each mare was sampled once between 4 and 69 hours postbreeding. In mares which did not conceive, sampling was repeated at the following estrus. The findings were compared with those obtained prior to breeding and correlated with the breeding outcome. Bacteria were cultured from...
Extender and centrifugation effects on the motility patterns of slow-cooled stallion spermatozoa.
Journal of animal science    August 1, 1991   Volume 69, Issue 8 3308-3313 doi: 10.2527/1991.6983308x
Padilla AW, Foote RH.Slow-cooled stallion spermatozoa, with and without seminal plasma removed by centrifugation, were diluted in Kenney's extender (KE) containing nonfat dry skim milk with glucose and antibiotics or in KE supplemented by adding a modified high-potassium Tyrode's medium (KMT). Four ejaculates from each of four stallions were collected and divided factorially across these four treatments. Percentage of motile sperm, path velocity, and linearity immediately after treatment (0 h) and after storage at 4 degrees C for 24, 48, and 72 h were evaluated objectively by use of a HTM-2030 sperm motility analy...
Comparison of pregnancy rates from transfer of fresh versus cooled, transported equine embryos.
Theriogenology    July 1, 1991   Volume 36, Issue 1 23-32 doi: 10.1016/0093-691x(91)90430-l
Carney NJ, Squires EL, Cook VM, Seidel GE, Jasko DJ.Donor mares of mixed, light-horse breeds, maintained at Colorado State University, provided 104 embryos for immediate transfer (fresh embryos). One hundred and thirty-six additional embryos were collected on various breeding farms in the United States and were shipped to Colorado State University via commercial airlines (cooled embryos). Embryos were harvested 7 d after ovulation, graded, and either transferred into a mare immediately (<1 h) or placed in Ham's F-10 medium plus 10% fetal calf serum in an atmosphere of 5% CO2, 5% O2, 90% N2 and packaged in a passive cooling unit (Equitai...
Fertility of a stallion with low sperm motility and a high incidence of an unusual sperm tail defect.
The Veterinary record    May 11, 1991   Volume 128, Issue 19 449-451 doi: 10.1136/vr.128.19.449
Hellander JC, Samper JC, Crabo BG.At the beginning of the breeding season an eight-year-old standardbred stallion had semen with virtually zero sperm motility and an approximately 90 per cent incidence of midpiece and tail defects. The motility of the sperm improved to 7 per cent when semen was collected daily but its morphology did not improve. Electron microscopy revealed that the defects consisted mainly of a loss of microtubules in the axoneme and of disorganised midpieces. A pregnancy rate of 24 per cent per cycle and 44 per cent for the season was achieved in 32 mares after the insemination of whole ejaculates collected ...
Effect of administration of phenylbutazone or progesterone on recovery of embryos from the uterus of mares 5 days after ovulation.
American journal of veterinary research    May 1, 1991   Volume 52, Issue 5 678-681 
Hinrichs K, Watson ED.Twelve horse mares were used to investigate the effect of phenylbutazone or progesterone administration on uterine tubal motility, as reflected by embryo recovery from the uterus on day 5 after ovulation. Four treatment groups were used: group A (controls), in which uterine flush was performed 7 to 11 days after ovulation; group B (5-day controls), in which uterine flush was performed 5 days after ovulation; group C, in which uterine flush was performed 5 days after ovulation following administration of phenylbutazone (2 g, IV) on day 3; and group D, in which uterine flush was performed 5 days...
Effects of bromocriptine and perphenazine on prolactin and progesterone concentrations in pregnant pony mares during late gestation.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    May 1, 1991   Volume 92, Issue 1 179-186 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.0920179
Ireland FA, Loch WE, Worthy K, Anthony RV.Pregnant pony mares in Group A (n = 4) received i.m. injections at 07:00 and 17:00 h of 0.8 mg bromocriptine/kg body weight 0.75 per day beginning on Day 295 of gestation and continuing until parturition. Group B (n = 4) was treated similarly, but perphenazine was administered orally at 0.375 mg/kg body weight twice a day beginning on Day 305 of gestation and continuing until parturition. Mares in Group C (n = 3) received i.m. injections of saline. Mean plasma prolactin and progesterone concentrations were greater (P less than 0.05) for mares in Group C than in Groups A and B from 295 to 309 d...
Assessment of the breeding prognosis of mares using paired endometrial biopsy techniques.
Equine veterinary journal    May 1, 1991   Volume 23, Issue 3 185-188 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1991.tb02751.x
Ricketts SW, Alonso S.Paired endometrial biopsy samples were taken from 530 subfertile mares, before and after treatment (where indicated) and a period of sexual rest. Prognoses were made after each biopsy (Categories 1A-4A before treatment and Categories 1B-4B after treatment), using histopathological criteria similar to those described by Kenney and Doig (1986). Eighty-seven per cent of the mares were assigned to first biopsy prognosis Category 3A. The second biopsy prognosis produced a more even population distribution (10, 47, 40 and 3 per cent respectively for Category 1B, 2B, 3B and 4B mares). First biopsy Ca...
The use of DNA index and karyotype analyses as adjuncts to the estimation of fertility in stallions.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1991   Volume 44 69-75 
Kenney RM, Kent MG, Garcia MC, Hurtgen JP.A total of 174 stallions were subjected to a standard fertility examination and classified as fertile, subfertile or sterile. All stallions were phenotypical males involved in breeding programmes with no detectable abnormalities in their reproductive organs. Fertile stallions had no history of any breeding problem. Subfertile stallions were referred with a history of a breeding problem that was subsequently determined not to be attributable to the mares or infectious diseases. They were divided into chromosomally normal and abnormal groups on the basis of karyotype. The relative DNA content of...
Monitoring ovarian function and pregnancy by evaluating excretion of urinary oestrogen conjugates in semi-free-ranging Przewalski’s horses (Equus przewalskii).
Journal of reproduction and fertility    January 1, 1991   Volume 91, Issue 1 155-164 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.0910155
Monfort SL, Arthur NP, Wildt DE.Immunoreactive urinary oestrogen conjugates were assessed in daily urine samples (approximately 5 samples/week) collected from 8 Przewalski's mares maintained under semi-free-ranging pasture conditions. The relative percentage contributions of immunoreactive urinary oestrogens during different reproductive stages (oestrus, luteal phase, early, mid- and late gestation) were determined using high-pressure liquid chromatography. In general, conjugated forms of oestrone (oestrone sulphate and oestrone glucuronide) were the major excreted immunoreactive oestrogens in nonpregnant and pregnant Przewa...
Relationship between the fertility of fresh and frozen stallion semen and semen quality.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1991   Volume 44 107-114 
Samper JC, Hellander JC, Crabo BG.Studies were designed to investigate whether sperm motility determined with a Hamilton-Thorn HTM-2000 motility analyzer (HTM), or the percentage of spermatozoa that passed through glass wool (GW), Sephadex (S), or glass wool/Sephadex (GWS) filters could be used to predict the fertilizing potential of fresh or frozen semen. In the fresh semen study, 10 randomly selected ejaculates from 4 stallions exclusively used for A.I. breeding were assayed during the season. The 521 mares used were inseminated with 500 x 10(6) motile spermatozoa after gynaecological examination every 2 days. In the frozen ...
Post-partum ovarian activity in Finnhorse mares with special reference to seasonal effects.
Acta veterinaria Scandinavica    January 1, 1991   Volume 32, Issue 3 313-318 doi: 10.1186/BF03546960
Koskinen E.In a previous study, times from parturition to the first ovulation were followed in 55 Finnhorse mares on the basis of milk progesterone determinations. Ninety-six per cent of mares had ovulated by day 20 post-partum. If intervals of more than 19 days are excluded from the data, the time from parturition to 1st ovulation was 117 days. However, in cases of foaling before and after the beginning of June the times were 13.0 days and 8.8 days, respectively (p less than 0.001). Long intervals (over 16 days) occurred mainly before 1st May (in 6 out of 7 cases). In a 2nd study, 25 post-partum Finnhor...
Effect of pulsatile or continuous administration of GnRH on reproductive function of stallions.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1991   Volume 44 145-154 
Blue BJ, Pickett BW, Squires EL, McKinnon AO, Nett TM, Amann RP, Shiner KA.Gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH) was administered subcutaneously to reproductively normal stallions, either in a pulsatile manner (10 micrograms GnRH/2 h; n = 6) or as a continuous infusion (10 micrograms GnRH/2 h; n = 6), and in a pulsatile manner to 9 reproductively abnormal stallions, from February to July, 1988. Hormonal secretion patterns, testicular parameters and semen characteristics were monitored before and during treatment. In general, pulsatile GnRH caused a significant increase (P less than 0.05) in luteinizing hormone (LH) concentrations in the peripheral blood of normal st...
Control of onset of breeding season in the mare and its artificial regulation by progesterone treatment.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1991   Volume 44 307-318 
Alexander SL, Irvine CH.Mean plasma luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) levels and their pulse frequencies and the size of the largest ovarian follicle increased during spring in 12 mares studied twice monthly from deep anoestrus to the occurrence of the first ovulation of the breeding season. Mean FSH levels were reduced significantly in deep anoestrus and when a pre-ovulatory follicle was present, whereas mean LH levels were highest close to ovulation. Five of these 12 research mares and 20 of 40 maiden or barren Standardbred mares at a commercial studfarm were given daily intramuscular ...
Embryonic development after intra-follicular transfer of horse oocytes.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1991   Volume 44 369-374 
Hinrichs K, DiGiorgio LM.A technique was developed in which immature horse oocytes, obtained from slaughterhouse specimens, were transferred to the pre-ovulatory follicle of a mare in vivo, with resulting oocyte maturation, ovulation, fertilization and embryo development. Oocytes were collected from all follicles greater than 3 mm, and were classified as immature, maturing, expanded or denuded. The transfers were performed in the standing, tranquilized mare. The ovary containing the pre-ovulatory follicle was grasped per rectum. A trochar and cannula were placed through the abdominal wall in the flank area, ipsilatera...
Antigen recognition in feral mares previously immunized with porcine zonae pellucidae.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1991   Volume 44 321-325 
Kirkpatrick JF, Liu IM, Turner JW, Bernoco M.Twenty-six free-roaming feral mares were immunized against porcine zonae pellucidae (PZP) between February and May, 1988. Eight sexually mature mares received 2 inoculations 2 weeks apart, and 18 mares received 3 inoculations at intervals of 2 and 4 weeks. Analysis of urinary oestrone conjugates (E1C) and non-specific progesterone metabolites (iPdG) in samples collected in October, 1988, revealed that none of the 18 mares that received 3 and only 1 of the 6 mares that received two inoculations were pregnant, whereas 3 of 6 sham-injected control mares and 5 of 11 untreated mares were pregnant. ...
The effects of increase testicular temperature on spermatogenesis in the stallion.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1991   Volume 44 127-134 
Freidman R, Scott M, Heath SE, Hughes JP, Daels PF, Tran TQ.Stallions can experience an increase in testicular temperature from bouts of fever or from injury to the testes. In species other than the horse, increased temperature models have been used to study testicular degeneration. This study was undertaken to examine the effects of increased testicular temperature on spermatogenesis in the stallion as measured by semen evaluation. The results of this investigation demonstrate that increased testicular temperature is associated with significant transitory alterations in the routine semen evaluation of the stallion. The duration of increased testicular...
Penetration of frozen-thawed, zona-free hamster oocytes by fresh and slow-cooled stallion spermatozoa.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1991   Volume 44 207-212 
Padilla AW, Tobback C, Foote RH.A method for preparing stored unfrozen stallion spermatozoa for the zona-free hamster oocyte penetration test (HOPT) and a subsequent comparison of fresh and stored sperm by the HOPT were evaluated. In Experiment 1, sperm from 4 stallion ejaculates, cooled to 4 degrees C and stored for 24 h, were treated with 60, 90 and 120 microM of dilauroylphosphatidyl-choline (PC12) liposomes to initiate the acrosome reaction. The percentage of motile and acrosome-reacted (AR) sperm were recorded after 8, 15 and 30 min of incubation at 39 degrees C, by automated image analysis. Liposome concentration did n...
Variations in structural and functional changes of stallion spermatozoa in response to calcium ionophore A23187.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1991   Volume 44 199-205 
Zhang JJ, Muzs LZ, Boyle MS.Three experiments were conducted to assess the structural and functional changes of stallion spermatozoa in response to the calcium ionophore A23187, and to determine individual variation between stallions. In Experiment 1, changes in the acrosome of spermatozoa exposed to 7.14 microM A23187 for fixed times between 0 and 120 min were examined. There was a steady increase with time in the number of spermatozoa undergoing the acrosome reaction although the rate of increase differed between stallions. Sperm motility decreased sharply when incubation was extended beyond 30 min. In Experiment 2, th...
Maturation of oocytes from normal and atretic equine ovarian follicles as affected by steroid concentrations.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1991   Volume 44 385-392 
Okolski A, Bézard J, Magistrini M, Palmer E.The ovaries of 23 mares were collected at slaughter during April-June and follicles (4-40 mm in diameter) were dissected and punctured to obtain oocytes for culture. The follicles were grouped according to histology: (a) normal, (b) showing primary and (c) secondary atresia. Antral fluid was analyzed for steroid content; oestradiol and testosterone (but not progesterone or androstenediol) were closely correlated with follicle size and histological state. Oocytes were cultured early after slaughter in Medium 199 (Difco OSI, France) or Medium B2, the highest percentage of oocytes reaching Metaph...
In vitro fertilization in the horse. A retrospective study.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1991   Volume 44 375-384 
Palmer E, Bézard J, Magistrini M, Duchamp G.Since the first successful collection of oocytes by non-surgical puncture, there have been numerous attempts to fertilize them but few segmented embryos have resulted. The latest attempts at follicular puncture (Palmer et al., 1987) provided 159 oocytes. Oocytes found broken (18%) were probably already broken, or at least fragile, before puncture. The 41 oocytes were fertilized only with semen treated with Ionophore A23187. Following ionophore treatment of semen, 16 ova segmented (of 113 inseminated oocytes) indicating fertilization, and another 7 showed signs of fertilization but not segmenta...
The effects of continuous treatment of stallions with high levels of a potent GnRH analogue.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1991   Volume 44 169-182 
Boyle MS, Skidmore J, Zhang J, Cox JE.The effect of long-term treatment of stallions with a powerful gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH) analogue was investigated. In the first part of the study, 9 sexually mature pony stallions were allocated to 1 of 3 groups, each of which was treated with 240 micrograms or 60 micrograms Buserelin per day administered by subcutaneously sited osmotic pumps or 30-50 micrograms Buserelin per day via solid, slow-release implants injected subcutaneously. Peripheral blood plasma and serum samples were collected frequently and assayed for follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (L...
Measurements of glycosaminoglycans in follicular, oviductal and uterine fluids of mares.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1991   Volume 44 297-306 
Varner DD, Forrest DW, Fuentes F, Taylor TS, Hooper RN, Brinsko SP, Blanchard TL.Eighteen fertile mares were used to determine the effects of the oestrous cycle and location in the reproductive tract on the amount and concentration of glycosaminoglycans in luminal fluids. Ovariohysterectomies were performed in 3 groups of 6 mares on Day 3 of behavioural oestrus, within 6 h after ovulation or on Day 8 of dioestrus. The lumina of the uterine horns and oviducts ipsilateral and contralateral to the active ovary were flushed and fluid was aspirated from the dominant follicle in the oestrous preovulation group. Glycosaminoglycans and protein concentrations were measured in these...
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