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Topic:Luteolysis

Luteolysis in horses refers to the physiological process by which the corpus luteum, a temporary endocrine structure in the ovaries, undergoes regression. This process results in the cessation of progesterone production, a hormone necessary for maintaining pregnancy. In mares, luteolysis is typically initiated by the release of prostaglandin F2α from the uterine lining, which signals the corpus luteum to degenerate. The timing and regulation of luteolysis are integral to the equine estrous cycle, influencing the mare's reproductive status and fertility. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that examine the mechanisms, hormonal regulation, and implications of luteolysis in equine reproductive health.
Differential luteolytic function between the physiological breeding season, autumn transition and persistent winter cyclicity in the mare.
Animal reproduction science    May 4, 2009   Volume 117, Issue 3-4 232-240 doi: 10.1016/j.anireprosci.2009.04.012
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...
Induction of haemorrhagic anovulatory follicles in mares.
Reproduction, fertility, and development    November 15, 2008   Volume 20, Issue 8 947-954 doi: 10.1071/rd08136
Ginther OJ, Gastal MO, Gastal EL, Jacob JC, Beg MA.A follicular wave and luteolysis were induced in mares by ablation of follicles > or =6 mm and treatment with prostaglandin F(2alpha) (PGF) on Day 10 (where ovulation = Day 0). The incidence of haemorrhagic anovulatory follicles (HAFs) in the induced waves (20%) was greater (P < 0.007) than in preceding spontaneous waves (2%). Hormone and follicle dynamics were compared between induced follicular waves that ended in ovulations (ovulating group; n = 36) v. HAFs (HAF group; n = 9). The day of the first ovulation or the beginning of HAF formation at the end of an induced wave was designated as po...
Characterisation of pulses of 13,14-dihydro-15-keto-PGF2alpha (PGFM) and relationships between PGFM pulses and luteal blood flow before, during, and after luteolysis in mares.
Reproduction, fertility, and development    August 2, 2008   Volume 20, Issue 6 684-693 doi: 10.1071/rd08077
Ginther OJ, Rodrigues BL, Ferreira JC, Araujo RR, Beg MA.Blood collections for characterising 13,14-dihydro-15-keto-PGF2alpha (PGFM) pulses in mares and colour-Doppler examinations for estimating percentage of corpus luteum with blood-flow signals were done hourly for a 24-h session on Day 15 (ovulation = Day 0; n = 13 mares) or during 12-h sessions from Days 12 to 16 (n= 10 mares). Luteolysis was defined as extending from the beginning of a precipitous decrease in progesterone until progesterone was <2 ng mL(-1). Comparisons were made among preluteolysis, luteolysis, and postluteolysis. Greater prostaglandin F2alpha activity (mean PGFM concentra...
Induction of estrus and ovulation: why some mares respond and others do not.
Theriogenology    June 12, 2008   Volume 70, Issue 3 445-447 doi: 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2008.04.040
Samper JC.The two most common procedures for breeding management of mares involve induction of luteolysis and induction of ovulation. Although both of these events are usually achieved, physiologic conditions affect the timing of the response. In a diestrus mare treated with prostaglandin F(2alpha) (PGF), or a PGF analogue, it is well documented that, on average, the interval from treatment to the onset of estrus is 3-4 days, whereas ovulation occurs 8-10 days after treatment. However, the diameter of the ovulatory follicle, as well as its status at the time of PGF treatment, determines the intervals fr...
Miniature ponies: 1. Follicular, luteal and endometrial dynamics during the oestrous cycle.
Reproduction, fertility, and development    April 12, 2008   Volume 20, Issue 3 376-385 doi: 10.1071/rd07164
Gastal EL, Neves AP, Mattos RC, Petrucci BP, Gastal MO, Ginther OJ.Follicular dynamics were studied during 12 interovulatory intervals (IOIs) and 36 preovulatory periods in Miniature mares. The percentage of IOIs with the following follicle events was: ovulatory wave with only one follicle>or=10 mm (55%), diameter deviation similar to previous reports in larger mares (25%) and minor waves emerging before or after the ovulatory wave (55%). Follicle data were compared among Miniature ponies, large ponies and Breton horses (n=12 IOIs per breed). The IOI was longer (P<0.001) in Miniature ponies (23.3+/-0.9 days) and in large ponies (23.9+/-0.5 days) than in...
Effects of exogenous insulin on luteolysis and reproductive cyclicity in the mare.
Reproduction in domestic animals = Zuchthygiene    March 19, 2008   Volume 43, Issue 4 422-428 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0531.2007.00929.x
Rambags BP, van Rossem AW, Blok EE, de Graaf-Roelfsema E, Kindahl H, van der Kolk JH, Stout TA.Insulin is a pancreatic hormone that classically regulates carbohydrate and fat metabolism, but also appears to play a role in various reproductive processes. A preliminary study suggested insulin production by day 10 to 18 equine conceptuses. The aim of the present study was to examine the hypothesis that insulin is the conceptus signal responsible for maternal recognition of pregnancy (MRP) in the mare, or otherwise influences reproductive cyclicity during the MRP period. Six Warmblood mares were treated daily during days 7 to 17 after ovulation of two successive oestrous cycles with either ...
Effect of repeated administration of oxytocin during diestrus on duration of function of corpora lutea in mares.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    December 18, 2007   Volume 231, Issue 12 1864-1867 doi: 10.2460/javma.231.12.1864
Vanderwall DK, Rasmussen DM, Woods GL.To determine whether IM administration of exogenous oxytocin twice daily on days 7 to 14 after ovulation blocks luteolysis and causes prolonged function of corpora lutea (CL) in mares. Methods: Prospective study. Methods: 12 mares. Methods: Beginning on the day of ovulation (day 0), jugular blood samples were collected every other day until day 40 for determination of progesterone concentration. On day 7, mares (n = 6/group) were treated with saline (0.9% NaCl) solution (control group) or oxytocin. Beginning on day 7, control mares received 3 mL of sterile saline solution every 12 hours, IM, a...
Progesterone and caspase-3 activation in equine cyclic corpora lutea.
Reproduction in domestic animals = Zuchthygiene    July 20, 2007   Volume 42, Issue 4 380-386 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0531.2006.00795.x
Ferreira-Dias G, Mateus L, Costa AS, Solá S, Ramalho RM, Castro RE, Rodrigues CM.Soon after ovulation, the newly formed corpus luteum (CL) starts secreting progesterone (P(4)), necessary for implantation. The CL, an ovarian transient endocrine organ, undergoes growth and regression throughout its life span. The objective of this study was to evaluate if caspase-3 mediates cell death in the equine cyclic luteal structures and relate it to luteal endocrine function. Blood and luteal tissue were collected during the breeding season after slaughter from 38 randomly assigned cycling mares. Luteal tissues were classified as corpora haemorrhagica (CH; n = 7); mid luteal phase cor...
Proliferative processes within the equine corpus luteum may depend on paracrine progesterone actions. Ferreira-Dias G, Costa AS, Mateus L, Korzekwa A, Redmer DA, Skarzynski DJ.Soon after ovulation, the corpus luteum (CL) starts secreting progesterone (P(4)), a hormone necessary for implantation. The aim of the study was to evaluate whether P(4) exerts an autocrine/paracrine action on luteal angiogenic activity and P(4), prostaglandin E(2) (PGE(2)) and NO production in the mare. Corpora hemorrhagica (CH) and mid-luteal phase CL (MCL) were cultured with (i) no hormone (Control); (ii) P(4); (iii) a P(4) precursor - pregnenolone; or (iv) a P(4) antagonist - onapristone [10(-4) M;10(-5) M; all steroids]. NO production decreased in MCL, with respect to CH, when treated wi...
Meclofenamic acid extends donor-recipient asynchrony in equine embryo transfer.
Equine veterinary journal    September 22, 2006   Volume 38, Issue 5 428-432 doi: 10.2746/042516406778400547
Wilsher S, Kölling M, Allen WR.A level of synchrony between embryo and uterine environment is essential for the establishment of pregnancy when performing embryo transfer. The ability to extend the acceptable degree of asynchrony would allow more efficient use of recipient mares. Objective: To establish if administration of the prostaglandin synthetase inhibitor, meclofenamic acid, to asynchronous recipient mares could widen the acceptable window of asynchrony for embryo transfer. Objective: The prostaglandin synthetase inhibitory action of meclofenamic acid may act to suppress luteolysis and thereby allow for a greater deg...
Temporal relationship between proliferating and apoptotic hormone-producing and endothelial cells in the equine corpus luteum.
Reproduction (Cambridge, England)    July 4, 2006   Volume 132, Issue 1 111-118 doi: 10.1530/rep.1.01051
Aguilar J, Fraser HM, Wilson H, Clutton E, Shaw DJ, Watson ED.The temporal relationship between endothelial cell death, vascular regression and the death of hormone-producing cells in the mare has not been established. To determine the dynamics of cell proliferation and death throughout the luteal phase, corpora lutea were studied at the early, mid- and late luteal phase, and after treatment with cloprostenol in the mid-luteal phase to induce premature luteolysis. Changes in cell proliferation and apoptosis were investigated utilising specific markers (phosphorylated histone-3 and activated caspase-3 respectively). Histone-3 positive cells were most abun...
Oxytocin does not contribute to the effects of cervical dilation on progesterone secretion and embryonic development in mares.
Theriogenology    June 14, 2006   Volume 66, Issue 5 1397-1404 doi: 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2006.04.032
Handler J, Hoffmann D, Weber F, Schams D, Aurich C.The aim of the present study was, to investigate the effects of oxytocin administration on Day 7 post-ovulation on progesterone secretion, pregnancy rate and embryonic growth in mares. Endogenous stimulation of oxytocin release was compared to the administration of native oxytocin or the long-acting oxytocin analogue carbetocin. At Day 7 after ovulation, mares had to undergo four treatments in a crossover design: (a) control, (b) oxytocin (10 IU i.v.), (c) carbetocin (280 microg i.m.) and (d) cervical dilation. On Day 13, all mares (8 of 8 mares) were pregnant on groups control, oxytocin and c...
Luteal blood flow and progesterone production in mares.
Animal reproduction science    May 22, 2006   Volume 99, Issue 1-2 213-220 doi: 10.1016/j.anireprosci.2006.05.018
Ginther OJ, Gastal EL, Gastal MO, Utt MD, Beg MA.The temporal relationships between blood flow in the corpus luteum (CL) and circulating progesterone concentrations were studied in 20 mares. Retrospective inspection of plasma progesterone concentrations indicated that a precipitous decrease occurred during Days 15-17 (Day 0 = ovulation) and was defined as the luteolytic period. Mean percentage of CL with color-Doppler signals for blood flow was maximum on Day 10 (77.3%), and Days 10-14 (49.8%) were defined as the preluteolytic period. The cross-sectional area of the CL decreased progressively from Day 4 (9.0 cm2) to Day 19 (1.5 cm2). Progest...
Effect of prostaglandin F2alpha on ovarian, adrenal, and pituitary hormones and on luteal blood flow in mares.
Domestic animal endocrinology    April 27, 2006   Volume 32, Issue 4 315-328 doi: 10.1016/j.domaniend.2006.04.006
Ginther OJ, Gastal EL, Gastal MO, Beg MA.The effect of a single injection of prostaglandin F2alpha (PGF) during mid-diestrus on systemic concentrations of progesterone, LH, FSH, estradiol, and cortisol and on blood flow to the corpus luteum was studied in 10 controls and 10 PGF-treated mares. Blood flow was assessed by estimating the percentage of corpus luteum with color-Doppler signals of blood flow during real-time scanning of the entire structure and by the diameter of the vascular pedicle near its attachment to the ovary. Treatment was done 8 days after ovulation and 0 h was immediately before the treatment. Examinations and col...
Acute effects of prostaglandin F(2alpha) on systemic oxytocin and progesterone concentrations during the mid- or late-luteal phase in mares.
Animal reproduction science    February 24, 2006   Volume 97, Issue 1-2 63-73 doi: 10.1016/j.anireprosci.2006.01.009
Utt MD, Acosta TJ, Wiltbank MC, Ginther OJ.The acute effects of prostaglandin F(2alpha) (PGF) on circulating oxytocin and progesterone concentrations were characterized in mares during the mid- or late-luteal phase. Pony mares were randomly assigned to the following experimental groups based on treatment with PGF (2.5mg) or saline on Day 8 or Day 13 (Day 0=ovulation): PGF-8, PGF-13, saline-8, or saline-13 (n=7/group). Mares were fitted with indwelling, jugular vein catheters and two blood samples (-5 and 0 min) were collected prior to treatment. Treatments were administered into the jugular vein (0 min) and blood collection continued t...
Controlling interrelationships of progesterone/LH and estradiol/LH in mares.
Animal reproduction science    November 28, 2005   Volume 95, Issue 1-2 144-150 doi: 10.1016/j.anireprosci.2005.10.008
Ginther OJ, Utt MD, Bergfelt DR, Beg MA.The interrelationships of progesterone, estradiol, and LH were studied in mares (n=9), beginning at the first ovulation (Day 0) of an interovulatory interval. An increase in mean progesterone concentrations began on Day 0 and reached maximum on Day 6, with luteolysis beginning on Day 14. A common progesterone threshold concentration of about 2 ng/ml for a negative effect on LH occurred at the beginning and end of the luteal phase. Progesterone and LH concentrations decreased at a similar rate from Day 6 until the onset of luteolysis on Day 14, consistent with a decreasing positive effect of LH...
Changes in steady-state concentrations of messenger ribonucleic acids in luteal tissue during prostaglandin F2alpha induced luteolysis in mares.
Animal reproduction science    November 22, 2005   Volume 90, Issue 3-4 273-285 doi: 10.1016/j.anireprosci.2005.02.008
Beg MA, Gastal EL, Gastal MO, Ji S, Wiltbank MC, Ginther OJ.Transvaginal ultrasound-guided luteal biopsy was used to evaluate the effects of prostaglandin (PG)F2alpha on steady-state concentrations of mRNA for specific genes that may be involved in regression of the corpus luteum (CL). Eight days after ovulation (Hour 0), mares (n=8/group) were randomized into three groups: control (no treatment or biopsy), saline+biopsy (saline treatment at Hour 0 and luteal biopsy at Hour 12), or PGF2alpha+biopsy (5mg PGF2alpha at Hour 0 and luteal biopsy at Hour 12). The effects of biopsy on CL were compared between the controls (no biopsy) and saline+biopsy group. ...
Regression and resurgence of the CL following PGF2alpha treatment 3 days after ovulation in mares.
Theriogenology    October 20, 2005   Volume 65, Issue 8 1605-1619 doi: 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2005.08.024
Bergfelt DR, Pierson RA, Ginther OJ.The present study was designed to characterize and compare the physiology and ultrasonographic morphology of the corpus luteum (CL) during regression and resurgence following a single dose of native prostaglandin F2alpha (PGF) given 3 days after ovulation, with a more conventional treatment given 10 days after ovulation. On the day of pre-treatment ovulation (Day 0), horse mares were randomly assigned to receive PGF (Lutalyse; 10 mg/mare, i.m.) on Day 3 (17 mares) or Day 10 (17 mares). Beginning on either Days 3 or 10, follicle and CL data and blood samples were collected daily until post-trea...
Microvascularization and angiogenic activity of equine corpora lutea throughout the estrous cycle.
Domestic animal endocrinology    August 10, 2005   Volume 30, Issue 4 247-259 doi: 10.1016/j.domaniend.2005.07.007
Ferreira-Dias G, Bravo PP, Mateus L, Redmer DA, Medeiros JA.Corpus luteum growth and endocrine function are closely dependent on the formation of new capillaries. The objectives of this study were to evaluate (i) tissue growth and microvascular development in the equine cyclic luteal structures; (ii) in vitro angiogenic activity of luteal tissues in response to luteotrophic (LH, PGE(2)) and luteolytic (PGF(2alpha)) hormones and (iii) to relate data to luteal endocrinological function. Our results show that microvascular density was increased in the early and mid luteal phase, followed by a fall in the late luteal phase and a further decrease in the cor...
Expression of mRNA encoding insulin-like growth factor binding protein-2 (IGFBP-2) during induced and natural regression of equine corpora lutea.
Theriogenology    April 25, 2005   Volume 64, Issue 6 1371-1380 doi: 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2005.02.015
Watson ED, Bae SE, Al-Zi'abi MO, Hogg CO, Armstrong DG.The insulin-like growth factors, IGF-I and -II, have been shown to play a key role in luteal function in some species. The IGF binding proteins, IGFBP-2 and -3, have been shown to inhibit binding of IGF-I and -II to bovine luteal cells and decrease progesterone production. We have recently shown that equine follicles have the genetic capacity to produce IGFBP-2, and that levels decrease in healthy preovulatory follicles. In the present study expression of mRNAs encoding IGFBP-2, as well as the rate-limiting steroidogenic enzyme, P450scc, were studied in equine corpora lutea to investigate whet...
Regulation of circulating gonadotropins by the negative effects of ovarian hormones in mares.
Biology of reproduction    April 13, 2005   Volume 73, Issue 2 315-323 doi: 10.1095/biolreprod.105.040253
Ginther OJ, Gastal EL, Gastal MO, Beg MA.The functional and temporal relationships between circulating gonadotropins and ovarian hormones in mares during Days 7-27 (ovulation = Day 0) was studied using control, follicle ablation, and ovariectomy groups (n = 6 mares/group). In the follicle-ablation group, all follicles > or = 6 mm were ablated on Day 7, and every 2 days thereafter, newly emerging follicles were also ablated. Estradiol concentrations decreased (P < 0.01) similarly in the controls and the follicle-ablation group between Days 7 and 11 and by Day 15 began to increase in the controls and continued to decrease in the ...
Deslorelin on Day 8 or 12 postovulation does not luteinize follicles during an artificially maintained diestrous phase in the mare.
Theriogenology    May 26, 2004   Volume 62, Issue 1-2 57-64 doi: 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2003.07.024
Glazar BS, McCue PM, Bruemmer JE, Squires EL.Practical estrus synchronization schemes are needed for mares. The Ovsynch synchronization protocol for cattle involves the administration of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) to induce ovulation or luteinization of dominant follicles during the luteal phase and prostaglandin 7 days later to cause regression of any luteal tissue and development of a preovulatory follicle. An Ovsynch-type synchronization program potentially could be developed for horses if luteinization or ovulation of diestrous follicles occurred in response to GnRH treatment. The objective of this study was to determine i...
Estrous cycle characteristics, luteal function, secretion of oxytocin (OT) and plasma concentrations of 15-keto-13,14-dihydro-PGF2alpha (PGF2alpha-metabolite) after administration of low doses of prostaglandin F2alpha (PGF2alpha) in pony mares.
Theriogenology    March 24, 2004   Volume 61, Issue 7-8 1573-1582 doi: 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2003.09.005
Handler J, Wüstenhagen A, Schams D, Kindahl H, Aurich C.In the present study, the kinetics of the prostaglandin F2alpha (PGF2alpha)-metabolite 15-keto-13,14-dihydro-PGF2alpha after a single intramuscular application of various doses of the natural PGF2alpha dinoprost at Day 7 of the cycle in the mare were investigated. Effects of low doses on estrous cycle length and life span of corpus luteum were examined, because release of PGF2alpha is still under discussion to have detrimental influence on success rates of transcervical transfer of equine embryos. Eight Shetland pony mares were each randomly assigned to each of four treatments: (a) 0.8 mg/100 ...
Expression of key prostaglandin synthases in equine endometrium during late diestrus and early pregnancy.
Biology of reproduction    October 15, 2003   Volume 70, Issue 2 391-399 doi: 10.1095/biolreprod.103.020800
Boerboom D, Brown KA, Vaillancourt D, Poitras P, Goff AK, Watanabe K, Doré M, Sirois J.Luteolysis in domestic species is mediated by the release of luteolytic pulses of prostaglandin (PG) F(2alpha) by the uterus at the end of diestrus, which must be suppressed by the conceptus to permit maternal recognition of pregnancy. In many species, including the horse, both the conceptus and the endometrium also synthesize PGE(2), which may antagonize PGF(2alpha) by playing a luteotropic and/or antiluteolytic role. While the release of PGE(2) and PGF(2alpha) by the equine endometrium in late diestrus and early pregnancy has been previously studied, the underlying prostaglandin synthase gen...
Luteal function in mares following administration of oxytocin, cloprostenol or saline on day 0, 1 or 2 post-ovulation.
Theriogenology    August 26, 2003   Volume 60, Issue 6 1119-1125 doi: 10.1016/s0093-691x(03)00112-2
Nie GJ, Johnson KE, Wenzel JG, Braden TD.Mares (n = 30) were treated in the post-ovulatory period with saline, oxytocin, or cloprostenol (Clo). Dose, administration frequency and treatment day (Day 0, 1 or 2 post-ovulation) were evaluated. Interovulatory interval of control cycles was 22.7 (+/-0.36) days with a range of 20.6 (+/-1.44) to 23.8 (+/-1.39) days among all treatment groups. Mares treated with two micro-doses of cloprostenol on Day 2 post-ovulation had the shortest interovulatory interval. This group also had the lowest mean circulating progesterone concentrations on Days 3-7 and 13, and was the slowest group to reach conce...
A light microscopic and ultrastructural study on the presence and location of oxytocin in the equine endometrium.
Theriogenology    August 26, 2003   Volume 60, Issue 5 909-921 doi: 10.1016/s0093-691x(02)01362-6
Bae SE, Watson ED.It has been reported that oxytocin is produced not only in the hypothalamus and posterior pituitary but also in outside the classical hypothalamo-neurohypophyseal axis such as the ovary, testis, placenta and in some nonreproductive sites. In the mare, oxytocin-mRNA has been identified in the endometrium, and oxytocin and its neurophysin have been identified in the uterus. In the present study, oxytocin was localised in the endometrium of the mare at the light microscopic and ultrastructural level by immunostaining and immunogold labelling of endometrial biopsy specimens collected during estrus...
Angiogenesis and vascular endothelial growth factor expression in the equine corpus luteum.
Reproduction (Cambridge, England)    February 13, 2003   Volume 125, Issue 2 259-270 
Al-zi'abi MO, Watson ED, Fraser HM.Precise pharmacological control of the corpus luteum is important in the manipulation of the oestrous cycle in mares. Angiogenesis plays a key role in the growth and regression of the corpus luteum; therefore, influencing the vasculature of the corpus luteum may offer a novel method for controlling its lifespan. In the present study, changes in angiogenesis and vascular expression of endothelial growth factor (VEGF) were evaluated throughout the luteal phase and after PGF(2alpha)-induced luteolysis. Corpora lutea were collected from mares in the early luteal phase (days 3-4), mid-luteal phase ...
Secretion patterns of oxytocin and PGF2alpha-metabolite in response to cervical dilatation in cyclic mares.
Theriogenology    January 16, 2003   Volume 59, Issue 5-6 1381-1391 doi: 10.1016/s0093-691x(02)01189-5
Handler J, Königshofer M, Kindahl H, Schams D, Aurich C.We conducted the present study to establish a standardized method for cervical stimulation without affecting the endometrium, and to investigate the effect on estrous cycle pattern and concentrations of progesterone, oxytocin and PGF2alpha-metabolite of cervical dilatation in the mare. Six healthy Haflinger mares underwent three different treatments (control, insertion, dilatation) on Days 5 and 7 of the cycles in different orders according to a Latin square design. During dilatation, the balloon of the catheter was inflated stepwise every 30s with warm physiological saline to a maximum of 50 ...
Removal of deslorelin (Ovuplant) implant 48 h after administration results in normal interovulatory intervals in mares.
Theriogenology    September 6, 2002   Volume 58, Issue 5 865-870 doi: 10.1016/s0093-691x(02)00923-8
McCue PM, Farquhar VJ, Carnevale EM, Squires EL.Deslorelin implants, approved for use in inducing ovulation in mares, have been associated with prolonged interovulatory intervals in some mares. Administration of prostaglandins in the diestrous period, following a deslorelin-induced ovulation, has been reported to increase the incidence of delayed ovulations. The goals of the present study were: (1) to determine the percentage of mares given deslorelin that experience delayed ovulations with or without subsequent prostaglandin treatment, and (2) to determine if removal of the implant 48 h after administration would effect the interval to sub...
Chemoattractant properties of conditioned medium from equine corpora lutea collected at various stages of the oestrous cycle.
Equine veterinary journal    July 11, 2002   Volume 34, Issue 3 279-282 doi: 10.2746/042516402776186092
Lawler DF, Brazil TJ, Dagleish MP, Watson ED.This study investigated the chemotactic activity of equine CL at different stages of the oestrous cycle. The purpose of this was to ascertain whether luteal tissue itself contributes to the massive influx of leucocytes around the time of natural and induced luteal regression. Corpora lutea were collected at different stages of dioestrus and after treatment with PGF2alpha. Culture medium harvested after incubation of luteal tissue for 20 h was chemotactic for both polymorphonuclear and mononuclear cells in late dioestrus (before functional regression) as well as after natural and induced luteal...