Hormones in horses are chemical messengers produced by various glands and tissues, regulating numerous physiological processes essential for maintaining homeostasis. These hormones influence a wide range of functions, including growth, metabolism, reproduction, and stress responses. Key hormones in equine physiology include cortisol, estrogen, testosterone, and insulin, among others. The levels and effects of these hormones can vary based on factors such as age, sex, and environmental conditions, impacting overall health and performance. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the production, regulation, and physiological roles of hormones in equine biology.
Ginther OJ.Variation is the principal barrier to progress in unraveling the complexities of biological mechanisms. The resulting slow research progress is well illustrated in the chronology of events in elucidating the mechanism for regression of the corpus luteum (luteolysis) during the equine estrous cycle. Many of the underlying foundations of the female reproductive system in farm animals were developed during the 1930s to 1950s, despite the lack of methods for determining the concentrations of circulating hormones. In the 1960s, a uterine luteolysin was postulated on the basis of several experimenta...
Tyler CR, Filby AL, Bickley LK, Cumming RI, Gibson R, Labadie P, Katsu Y, Liney KE, Shears JA, Silva-Castro V, Urushitani H, Lange A, Winter MJ....Many factors have been considered in evaluations of the risk-benefit balance of hormone replacement therapy (HRT), used for treating menopausal symptoms in women, but not its potential risks for the environment We investigated the possible environmental health implications of conjugated equine estrogens (CEEs), the most common components of HRT, including their discharge into the environment, their uptake, potency, and ability to induce biological effects in wildlife. Influents and effluents from four U.K. sewage treatment works (STWs), and bile of effluent-exposed fish, were screened for six ...
Zhang N, Ding S, Kolbanovskiy A, Shastry A, Kuzmin VA, Bolton JL, Patel DJ, Broyde S, Geacintov NE.The equine estrogens equilin (EQ) and equilenin (EN) are the active components in the widely prescribed hormone replacement therapy formulation Premarin. Metabolic activation of EQ and EN generates the catechol 4-hydroxyequilenin (4-OHEN) that autoxidizes to the reactive o-quinone form in aerated aqueous solutions. The o-quinones react predominantly with C, and to a lesser extent with A and G, to form premutagenic cyclic covalent DNA adducts in vitro and in vivo. To obtain insights into the structural properties of these biologically important DNA lesions, we have synthesized site-specifically...
de Graaf-Roelfsema E, Veldhuis PP, Keizer HA, van Ginneken MM, van Dam KG, Johnson ML, Barneveld A, Menheere PP, van Breda E, Wijnberg ID....The influence of intensified and reduced training on nocturnal growth hormone (GH) secretion and elimination dynamics was studied in young (1.5 yr) Standardbred geldings to detect potential markers indicative for early overtraining. Ten horses trained on a treadmill for 32 wk in age-, breed-, and gender-matched fixed pairs. Training was divided into four phases (4, 18, 6, and 4 wk, respectively): 1) habituation to high-speed treadmill trotting, 2) normal training, in which speed and duration of training sessions were gradually increased, 3) in this phase, the horses were divided into 2 groups:...
Ginther OJ, Siddiqui MA, Beg MA.The hypotheses were tested that prostaglandin F2alpha (PGF) travels from the uterus to the ovaries via a systemic route in mares, as opposed to a local route in ruminants, and that one pulse of PGF produces only partial luteolysis. Intravenous (i.v.) and intrauterine (i.u.) infusions of PGF were performed 8 days after ovulation at a constant rate for 2 h. Plasma concentrations of PGF were assessed by assay of 13,14-dihydro-15-keto-PGF2alpha (PGFM). Total doses administered were as follows: 0, 0.05, 0.1, 0.5 and 1.0 mg, i.v., PGF and 0 and 0.5 mg, i.u., PGF (n=4 mares per group). In addition, P...
Ginther OJ, Gastal EL, Gastal MO, Duarte LF, Beg MA.The effect of the ovarian follicles on plasma concentrations of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH) before versus after the expected emergence of the ovulatory follicular wave was studied on Days 0 to 18 (Day 0=ovulation) in four groups of mares (n=6/group). In addition to a control group, all follicles >/=6mm in diameter were ablated on Days 0.5, 6.5, or 12.5 in a herd of mares with reported emergence at 6mm of the future ovulatory follicle on mean Day 10.5. Concentrations of FSH were not different between the Day-0.5 or Day-6.5 ablation groups and the correspon...
Hart KA, Slovis NM, Barton MH.Transient hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis dysfunction occurs frequently in critically ill humans and impacts survival. The prevalence and impact of HPA axis dysfunction in critically ill neonatal foals are not well characterized. Objective: (1) HPA axis dysfunction occurs in hospitalized neonatal foals, and is characterized by inappropriately low basal serum cortisol concentration or inadequate cortisol response to exogenous adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH); (2) hospitalized foals with HPA axis dysfunction have more severe disease and are less likely to survive than hospitalized fo...
Hirano Y, Kimura J, Nambo Y, Yokota H, Nakamura S, Takemoto S, Himeno R, Mishima T, Matsui M, Miyake YI.The structure of the equine ovary is different from that of other mammals in its extremely large size, the presence of ovarian fossa and the inverted location of its cortex and medulla. A three-dimensional internal structure microscopy (3D-ISM), which consists of a computer-controlled slicer, a CCD camera, a laser disc recorder and a PC, is very useful for the observation of the internal structures in equine ovaries. In addition, the three-dimensional images of follicles and corpus luteum (CL) reconstructed by the segmentation technique can clarify the spatial arrangement in the equine ovary. ...
Ginther OJ, Siddiqui MA, Beg MA.Responses to intravenous treatment of mares with prostaglandin F2alpha (PGF) 8 d after ovulation were studied in three groups (n=4/group): control (no treatment), bolus (single treatment with 2.5 mg PGF), and infusion (0.1 mg PGF during 2 h). Infusion resulted in a 13,14-dihydro-15-keto-PGF2alpha (PGFM) concentration (559+/-44 pg/mL) that was not different from the mean concentration for the major portion of a natural PGFM pulse associated with luteolysis (569+/-45 pg/mL; n=5). Progesterone in the bolus group increased (P<0.03) between 0 (17.8+/-3.5 ng/mL) and 2 min (25.3+/-4.8 ng/mL), peak...
Müller K, Ellenberger C, Schoon HA.Cyclical ovaries of 18 mares were examined histologically and immunohistochemically for vascular endothelial growth factor A and B (VEGF A; VEGF B), angiopoietin1 and 2 (Ang1; Ang2), vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 1 and 2 (VEGF-R1; VEGF-R2), angiopoietin receptor (Tie2) and von Willebrand factor. The most intensive coexpression of the examined factors and receptors was detected in the periovulatory period, when a distinctive ovarian angiogenesis takes place, being essential for tertiary follicle maturation and for the endocrine function of the Corpus luteum. Based on the immunohis...
Parillo F, Mancuso R, Vullo C, Catone G.This work was undertaken to determine the glycoconjugates secreted by the epithelium of the prostate in the intact stallion and castrated horse using lectin histochemical procedures in conjunction with enzymatic digestion and deglycosylation treatments. Additionally, anti-5 and 13-16-cytokeratin antibodies were used to localize epithelial basal cells. In the stallion, lectin histochemistry showed the following sugar residues in the Golgi zone of the glandular cells: α-Glu/Man, α-Fuc and β-Gal included in both O- and N-linked oligosaccharides as well as β-GalNAc, GlcNAc and α-Gal, which be...
King SS, Douglas BL, Roser JF, Silvia WJ, Jones KL.There is a well-documented increase in luteolytic failure, resulting in spontaneously prolonged corpus luteum (SPCL) function, during estrous cycles of horses in autumn. The cause of this phenomenon may be due to seasonal alterations in PGF(2alpha) and/or in prolactin (PRL) secretion around luteolysis. To investigate this, progesterone (P4), 13, 14-dihydro, 15-keto PGF(2alpha) (PGFM) and PRL concentrations were compared between summer and autumn estrous cycles during natural luteolysis and luteolysis induced by benign uterine stimulation. A single estrous cycle from mares in June-July (n=12) w...
Altermatt JL, Suh TK, Stokes JE, Carnevale EM.Young (4 to 9 yr) and old (>or=20 yr) mares were treated with equine follicle-stimulating hormone (eFSH), and oocytes were collected for intracytoplasmic sperm injections (ICSI). Objectives were to compare: (1) number, morphology and developmental potential of oocytes collected from young v. old mares from cycles with or without exogenous eFSH and (2) oocyte morphology parameters with developmental competence. Oocytes were collected from preovulatory follicles 20 to 24 h after administration of recombinant equine LH and imaged before ICSI for morphological measurements. After ICSI, embryo d...
Ginther OJ, Almamun M, Shahiduzzaman AK, Beg MA.The mechanism for a reported temporal association between ovulation and a transient disruption in the periovulatory increase in LH concentrations was studied in nine mares treated with human chorionic gonadotropin when the preovulatory follicle was >/=32mm. Examinations for ovulation detection and blood collection were done at 2-h intervals and the results were retrospectively centralized to ovulation (Hour 0). Concentrations of LH began to increase (P<0.03) rapidly at Hour -18, decreased (P<0.04) between Hours 0 and 6, and again increased (P<0.0001) after Hour 12. A progressive de...
Ishii M, Kobayashi S, Acosta TJ, Miki W, Matsui M, Yamanoi T, Miyake Y, Miyamoto A.The aim of this study was to establish the effectiveness of administration of oxytocin (OT) on placental expulsion after foaling. Four foaling mares with the placentas retained for up 1 hr after foaling received OT (50 IU) administration at 1 hr intervals before expulsion of the placenta. The changes in the plasma concentrations of OT and the PGF2alpha metabolite (PGFM) were investigated, and the influence of OT administration was considered. The results were as follows. The placenta was expelled after one to three OT administrations in all four mares that received OT. In two mares, which expe...
Ealy AD, Eroh ML, Sharp DC.The equine embryo must signal its presence to the uterus for pregnancy to continue to term. Mobility of the conceptus throughout the uterus is crucial for its survival, and this action presumably permits the conceptus to transmit its antiluteolytic signal to the endometrium. Studies were completed to establish whether this unidentified antiluteolytic signal targets prostaglandin G/H synthase 2 (PGHS2), a rate limiting enzyme in converting arachidonic acid to prostaglandins (PGs). In the first study, quantitative RT-PCR was used to determine the relative abundance of PGHS2 mRNA in endometrium d...
Raz T, Card C.Reliable methods of regulating estrus and stimulating superovulations in equine embryo transfer programs are desirable. Our objectives were to investigate the efficacy of a progesterone and estradiol-17beta (P&E) estrus synchronization regimen in mares with and without subsequent equine follicle-stimulating hormone (eFSH) treatment and to examine the effects of eFSH on folliculogenesis and embryo production. Cycling mares were treated with P&E daily for 10 d. On the final P&E treatment day, prostaglandin F(2alpha) was administered, and mares were randomly assigned to one of two treatment group...
Wong DM, Vo DT, Alcott CJ, Stewart AJ, Peterson AD, Sponseller BA, Hsu WH.The purpose of this study was to investigate total baseline plasma cortisol and adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) concentrations, and ACTH-stimulated cortisol concentrations in foals from birth to 12 wk of age. Plasma (baseline) cortisol and ACTH concentrations were measured in 13 healthy foals at birth and at 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 10, 14, 21, 28, 42, 56, and 84 d of age. Each foal received cosyntropin (0.1 microg/kg) intravenously. Plasma cortisol concentrations were measured before (baseline), and 30, and 60 min after cosyntropin administration at birth and at 3, 5, 7, 10, 14, 21, 28, 42, 56, a...
Raz T, Carley S, Card C.The objective was to compare the effects of eFSH and deslorelin treatment regimes on ovarian stimulation and embryo production of donor mares in early spring transition. Starting January 30th, mares kept under ambient light were examined by transrectal ultrasonography. When a follicle > or =25 mm was detected, mares were assigned to one of two treatment groups, using a sequential alternating treatment design. In the eFSH group, mares (n=18) were treated twice daily with eFSH (12.5mg im) until they achieved a follicle > or =35 mm; hCG was given 36 h later. In the deslorelin group, mares (n=18) ...
Van Weyenberg S, Buyse J, Janssens GP.In this study 0 or 4 g of l-carnitine was supplemented for 7 days in a cross-over design of six healthy ponies to modulate glucose metabolism and leptin production. At the end of each period, serial blood samples were taken to measure glucose and insulin response, leptin, triglyceride (TG), non-esterified fatty acids (NEFA) and creatine phosphokinase. l-carnitine supplementation was associated with a decrease in postprandial plasma glucose and insulin concentration, indicating an enhanced glucose tolerance. In contrast, postprandial plasma leptin concentration was increased when l-carnitine wa...
El-Maaty AM, Gabr FI.Sixteen Arab lactating mares belonging to Al-Zahraa Arab Horse Stud underwent two ultrasound examinations at 3 weeks interval starting from the day of demonstration of foaling heat. In addition, daily blood samples were collected from parturition until after exhibiting first postpartum estrus (day 11) with daily observation of estrous signs. Both leptin and estradiol hormones were assayed. Mean day of foaling heat was 8.9+/-0.9 day. Most mares came in foaling heat during days 9 and 10 had high conception rate compared to those who came in estrus earlier or later. Estradiol levels were high aft...
Reijerkerk EP, Visser EK, van Reenen CG, van der Kolk JH.To compare the effects of IV administration of various doses of ovine corticotrophin-releasing hormone (oCRH) on plasma and saliva cortisol concentrations in healthy horses and determine whether an oCRH challenge test protocol is valid for use in adult horses. Methods: 24 healthy Warmblood horses. PROCEDURES-Each horse received oCRH in saline (0.9% NaCl) via IV administration at a dose of 0 (control treatment), 0.01, 0.1, or 1.0 Mg/kg (6 horses/group). Jugular blood and saliva samples were collected simultaneously 15 minutes before and immediately prior to injection (baseline); data from these...
Rizzo A, Mutinati M, Spedicato M, Minoia G, Trisolini C, Punzi S, Roscino MT, Jirillo F, Sciorsci R.The beta-subunits of thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) and human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) share a high homology, just like the ectodomains of their receptors, do. As a consequence, hCG was shown to exert a thyrotropic action in humans and hamsters. This study aimed to investigate whether hCG, used to induce ovulation, displays a thyrotropic effect in the equine species too. Forty mares at estrus were divided in two groups; 20 were intravenously treated with sterile saline solution (NaCl 0.9%) (group A); 20 were intravenously treated with 4000 I.U. of hCG (group B). All the mares were artif...
Magee C, Foradori CD, Bruemmer JE, Arreguin-Arevalo JA, McCue PM, Handa RJ, Squires EL, Clay CM.The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the effects of kisspeptin (KiSS) on LH and FSH secretion in the seasonally estrous mare and to examine the distribution and connectivity of GnRH and KiSS neurons in the equine preoptic area (POA) and hypothalamus. The diestrous mare has a threshold serum gonadotropin response to iv rodent KiSS decapeptide (rKP-10) administration between 1.0 and 500 microg. Administration of 500 microg and 1.0 mg rKP-10 elicited peak, mean, and area under the curve LH and FSH responses indistinguishable to that of 25 microg GnRH iv, although a single iv injection...
Hurcombe SD, Toribio RE, Slovis NM, Saville WJ, Mudge MC, Macgillivray K, Frazer ML.Disorders of calcium regulation are frequently found in humans with critical illness, yet limited information exists in foals with similar conditions including septicemia. The purpose of this study was to determine whether disorders of calcium exist in septic foals, and to determine any association with survival. Objective: Blood concentrations of ionized calcium (Ca(2+)) and magnesium (Mg(2+)) will be lower in septic foals with concomitant increases in parathyroid hormone (PTH), calcitonin (CT), and parathyroid-related peptide (PTHrP) compared with healthy foals. The magnitude of these differ...
Jennings MW, Boime I, Daphna-Iken D, Jablonka-Shariff A, Conley AJ, Colgin M, Bidstrup LA, Meyers-Brown GA, Famula TR, Roser JF.The efficacy of a recently engineered single chain recombinant equine follicle stimulating hormone (reFSH) was investigated in estrous cycling mares whose gonadotropins and follicular activity had been suppressed by concurrent treatment with progesterone and estradiol (P&E). Time of estrus was synchronized in 15 estrous cycling mares during the breeding season with prostaglandins F(2alpha) (PGF(2alpha)). The day after ovulation, mares were treated once daily with P&E for 14 days. Mares received a second injection of PGF(2alpha) on day 6 of the synchronized estrous cycle to induce luteolysis. O...
Breuhaus BA.This study was performed to determine whether anhidrotic horses have altered thyroid function compared with horses that sweat normally. Objective: Anhidrotic horses have normal thyroid function. Methods: Ten client-owned horses with clinical signs of anhidrosis were paired with 10 horses living in the same environment that had normal sweat production. Methods: Horses were diagnosed as having normal sweat production or being anhidrotic based on responses to intradermal injections of terbutaline and physiologic responses to lunging exercise. Control horses were selected from the same environment...
Raz T, Amorim MD, Stover BC, Card CE.The objective of this study was to compare the efficacy of purified equine- and porcine-FSH treatment regimes in mares in early vernal transition. Mares (n = 22) kept under ambient light were examined ultrasonographically per-rectum, starting January 30th. They were assigned to one of two treatment groups using a sequential alternating treatment design when a follicle >or= 25 mm was detected. In the eFSH group, mares were treated twice daily with equine-FSH, and in the pFSH group mares were treated twice daily with porcine-FSH; treatments were continued until follicle(s) >or= 35 mm, and 24 h l...
Aguilera-Tejero E, Estepa JC, López I, Bas S, RodrÃguez M.Secondary hyperparathyroidism is a well known complication of renal failure in man (Llach 1995), carnivores (Nagode and Chew1992) and rodents (Bover et al.1994). In these species, renal disease results in increased synthesis and secretion of parathyroid hormone (PTH) and parathyroid gland hyperplasia. There are 3 main factors involved in the development ofsecondary hyperparathyroidism: a) phosphate (P) retention, dueto reduced glomerular filtration rate; b) decrease in calcitriol(CTR) production, as a consequence of renal mass loss; and c...
Goff AK, Leduc S, Poitras P, Vaillancourt D.The objective of this study was to determine if changes in steroid synthesis occurred in the horse blastocyst about the time of maternal recognition of pregnancy. Embryos collected between days 7.5 and 14.5 were incubated for 8 hr in vitro in HAM's F10 containing radiolabelled pregnenolone. The steroid metabolites in the incubation medium were separated by reverse phase HPLC and the major peaks expressed as a percentage of total metabolites. It was found that there were no major changes in the profile of metabolites throughout the period of study, although there was increased conversion as the...
Castro T, Jacob JC, Stefani G, Domingues RR, Ginther OJ.The concentrations of progesterone (P4) and a metabolite of PGF2α (PGFM) in mares were compared between the interovulatory interval (IOI; n = 8) and the corresponding days of pregnancy (n = 9). In daily blood samples, P4 increased between the day of ovulation (Day 0) and ∼Day 6 and then gradually decreased until the beginning of luteolysis in the IOI group. Before the beginning of luteolysis, there were no significant differences in P4 concentrations between the IOI and early pregnancy. In the IOI, PGFM concentration on the day before the beginning of luteolysis began to increase (P <Â...
Nagel C, Trenk L, Wulf M, Ille N, Aurich J, Aurich C.In mares, foaling is associated with changes in hematology, plasma electrolytes, blood pressure and heart rate and it has been hypothesized that these are induced by oxytocin. To test this hypothesis, mares (n = 8-14/group) were treated with oxytocin (OT; 20 I.U.) or saline (CON) at 1 h (test A) and 12 h after foaling (test B) and during first postpartum diestrus (test C). Heart rate, heart rate variability (HRV), atrioventricular blocks, salivary cortisol concentration, blood pressure, plasma electrolytes and blood count were determined. Heart rate decreased from test A to C (P < 0.001)...
Thornton JR.Current knowledge and understanding of the hormonal response to exercise are limited, whether in relation to horses, humans, or other species. The changes in plasma concentration of some hormones occur early in exercise, apparently owing to a neuronal stimulation, whereas others, being pituitary dependent, require hormonal stimulation. Also, although it is possible to observe changes in plasma concentrations of hormones, the mechanism by which this is achieved is not always understood, and unless the nonprotein-bound, or active, form of the hormone is also determined, changes in plasma concent...
Stabenfeldt GH, Daels PF, Munro CJ, Kindahl H, Hughes JP, Lasley B.A direct enzyme immunoassay was developed to measure conjugated oestrogens in the plasma of pregnant mares. The antibody was produced in rabbits using oestrone-3-glucuronide (E1G) conjugated to bovine serum albumin. The enzyme conjugate was E1G conjugated to horseradish peroxidase. A sharp increase in plasma E1G concentrations occurred between Days 35 and 40 of gestation. Values declined slightly to Day 45, remained relatively constant to around Day 70 and rose sharply thereafter. Fetal death before Day 35 had no effect on plasma concentrations of E1G. Fetal death after Day 35 in conjunction w...
Murase H, Niwa H, Katayama Y, Sato F, Hada T, Nambo Y.Fungal placentitis is an infectious disease inducing abortion in pregnant mares. In the present report, we describe a field case of abortion caused by fungal placentitis with consecutive examinations. The progesterone level and combined thickness of the uterus and placenta (CTUP) were abnormal before the onset of clinical signs. Additionally, the estradiol level started to change before the appearance of clinical signs. Abnormal serum amyloid A values and an abnormal fetal heart rate were observed after the onset of clinical signs. The present report demonstrates that the progesterone level an...
Vaughn SA, Norton NA, Hart KA.Mechanisms resulting in breed predispositions to insulin dysregulation (ID) are poorly characterized. Cortisol antagonizes insulin, and free, biologically active cortisol can be increased in ID. Breed-related differences in serum free cortisol fraction (FCF) could contribute to ID, but FCF has not been quantified in equidae predisposed to ID, such as ponies. To compare FCF and other hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis hormones between horses and ponies during health and ID. We hypothesized: (1) FCF is higher in ponies than horses in health, and is higher still in ponies with ID and obes...
Inoue J, Cerbito WA, Oguri N, Matsuzawa T, Sato K.The serum concentrations of testosterone and oestrogens were determined in stallions classified as geldings, normal (according to age) or infertile (azoospermic). There were significant differences in testosterone and oestrogen levels between the groups. Normal concentrations of testosterone and total oestrogens were attained after 16 months of age. Castrated and immature horses ( 4 years). The results suggest that serum levels of testosterone and total oestrogens may provide a sensitive index of the endocrine function of the testis in male horses.
Castagnetti C, Rametta M, Tudor Popeia R, Govoni N, Mariella J.This research investigates the levels of Adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) and cortisol in sick and healthy young horses (foals). The objective is to create a better understanding of these hormone levels […]
Padilla DJ, Epp TS, McDonough P, Marlin DJ, Erickson HH, Poole DC.During high intensity exercise, the very high pulmonary artery pressure (Ppa) experienced by Thoroughbred horses is considered a major factor in the aetiology of exercise-induced pulmonary haemorrhage (EIPH). Recently, endothelin-1 (ET-1), a potent vasoconstrictive hormone, has been found to increase Ppa in horses at rest via binding to its ET-1A receptor subtype. In addition, plasma concentrations of ET-1 are increased in horses during and after high intensity exercise. Objective: If ET-1 increases Ppa during exercise in the horse, administration of a specific ET-1A antagonist would decrease ...
Worthy K, Escreet R, Renton JP, Eckersall PD, Douglas TA, Flint DJ.Five pony mares were blood sampled during late pregnancy, foaling and early lactation. An homologous assay for horse prolactin was used to measure plasma prolactin concentrations in these samples. Regular estimates of cyclic activity were also made. Plasma prolactin concentrations rose markedly in the last week of pregnancy and remained high although variable in early lactation, before declining to basal levels by 1-2 months post partum. All mares showed a post-partum oestrus 7.0 +/- 0.9 days after parturition. One mare whose foal died shortly after birth showed a rapid decline in plasma prola...
Asa CS, Goldfoot DA, Garcia MC, Ginther OJ.Daily treatment (5 days) with estradiol resulted in increased levels (p less than 0.05) of proceptive behavior in ovariectomized as compared to control mares (N = 8 per treatment) within 4 hr of injection and for the 4 subsequent days. Ejaculations occurred more often (p less than 0.05) in estrogen-treated mares on days 2-5, but the number of precopulatory investigations by the stallions was not altered. Progesterone treatment resulted in an absence of sexual behavior except in one mare on Day 1. Control mares exhibited varying levels of sexual interest. The concurrent administration of estrad...
Dini P, Ducheyne K, Lemahieu I, Wambacq W, Vandaele H, Daels P.Several methods have been proposed to advance the onset of the breeding season in horses. Most of them are based on the exposure to an artificial lighting period combined with hormonal treatments. Mares exposed to an artificial photoperiod are most often housed indoors where the ambient temperature is often higher than the outside temperature. Mares held in barns are also exposed to different daylight intensities than horses kept outside, depending on the architecture. In the current study, we evaluated the impact of ambient temperature, daylight intensity and changes in body condition score (...