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Topic:Pregnancy

Pregnancy in horses, or equine gestation, is a physiological process that involves the development of a foal within the mare over approximately 11 months. This period is characterized by distinct stages, including fertilization, embryonic development, and fetal growth. Throughout gestation, mares undergo various physiological and hormonal changes to support the developing fetus. Monitoring pregnancy in horses involves assessing fetal health and mare well-being through veterinary examinations and diagnostic tools such as ultrasound. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the physiological processes, management practices, and health considerations associated with equine pregnancy.
Reproductive efficiency of Thoroughbred and Standardbred horses in north-east Victoria.
Australian veterinary journal    June 10, 2010   Volume 88, Issue 5 169-175 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.2010.00565.x
Nath LC, Anderson GA, McKinnon AO.To evaluate the reproductive efficiency of horse farms in north-east Victoria and identify aspects of management to be targeted for improving reproductive efficiency. Methods: Retrospective study. Methods: Records from seven Thoroughbred (TB) and four Standardbred (STB) studs in north-east Victoria from 1990 to 2001 were reviewed; 8813 cycles in 4455 mares were analysed. TB mares were inseminated by natural mating, whereas STB mares (89%) were artificially inseminated. Results: The overall early pregnancy rate per cycle was 68.8% for TB mares and for STB mares, 68.3%. Multiple pregnancy per cy...
Surgical results and fertility following correction of vesicovaginal reflux in mares.
Australian veterinary journal    June 10, 2010   Volume 88, Issue 5 182-185 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.2010.00556.x
Jalim SL, McKinnon AO.To evaluate the surgical results and fertility of mares bred at various intervals relative to surgical management of urovagina. Methods: Sixty-one mares underwent surgery to correct vesicovaginal reflux. Surgery was performed at varying times relative to breeding and postoperative fertility was evaluated. Results: Five mares were lost to follow-up and a further four were electively not bred. Of the remaining 52 mares, seasonal pregnancy and live foaling rates were 67% (35/52) and 54% (26/48), respectively. When mares were bred in the same cycle as the surgery, the first cycle following surgery...
Endocrine alterations around the time of abortion in mares impregnated with donkey or horse semen.
Animal reproduction science    May 27, 2010   Volume 121, Issue 1-2 124-130 doi: 10.1016/j.anireprosci.2010.05.015
Boeta M, Zarco L.The objective of this study was to monitor and compare the concentrations of equine chorionic gonadotropin (eCG), progesterone and estrone sulphate during normal and failed pregnancies of mares impregnated with donkey or horse semen, relating their individual endocrine profiles to the time of pregnancy loss, and to the histopathologic findings in the aborted fetuses and placenta. Mares (n=54) were used, 32 of them impregnated with donkey semen and 22 impregnated with horse semen. Blood samples were taken twice a week from Day 35 to 120 of pregnancy. Ultrasonographic observations of the fetus w...
Enhancing reproductive performance in mares.
Compendium (Yardley, PA)    May 18, 2010   Volume 32, Issue 1 E1-E7 
Scherzer J.Reproductive performance in mares can be enhanced by various techniques. Protocols hastening the onset of follicular development help establish pregnancy in mares and ensure that foals are born early in the year. The time spent breeding mares can be reduced by synchronizing estrus and inducing ovulation. After successful fertilization of the oocyte, the developing embryo can survive in the uterus only if postbreeding endometritis, if present, is treated.
hCG-induced ovulation in thoroughbred mares does not affect corpus luteum development and function during early pregnancy.
Reproduction in domestic animals = Zuchthygiene    May 12, 2010   Volume 44, Issue 6 859-864 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0531.2008.01100.x
Urquieta B, Durán MC, Coloma I, Parraguez VH.Our aim was to compare Corpus luteum (CL) development and blood plasma concentration of progesterone ([P4]) in thoroughbred mares after spontaneous ( Methods: C) or human chorionic gonadotrophin (hCG)-induced ovulation. Lactating mares (C=12; hCG=21) were daily teased and mated during second oestrus post-partum. Treated mares received 2500 IU hCG i.v. at first day of behavioural oestrus when dominant follicular size was >35, or=45 mm. Dominant follicle before ovulation, CL and gestational sac were measured by ultrasound and [P4] by radioimmunoassay (RIA). Blood sampling and ultrasound CL ex...
Selenium in blood, semen, seminal plasma and spermatozoa of stallions and its relationship to sperm quality.
Reproduction, fertility, and development    May 11, 2010   Volume 22, Issue 5 886-891 doi: 10.1071/RD10032
Bertelsmann H, Keppler S, Höltershinken M, Bollwein H, Behne D, Alber D, Bukalis G, Kyriakopoulos A, Sieme H.The essential trace element selenium is indispensable for male fertility in mammals. Until now, little data existed regarding the relationship between selenium and sperm quality in the stallion. Selenium, or selenium-dependent glutathione peroxidase activity, was determined in red blood cells, semen, seminal plasma and spermatozoa, and the percentages of spermatozoa with progressive motility (PMS), intact membranes (PMI), altered (positive) acrosomal status (PAS) and detectable DNA damage, determined by the sperm chromatin structure assay, were evaluated in 41 healthy stallions (three samples ...
Concentrations of altrenogest in plasma of mares and foals and in allantoic and amniotic fluid at parturition.
Theriogenology    May 10, 2010   Volume 74, Issue 2 229-235 doi: 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2010.02.006
Palm FM, Schenk I, Neuhauser S, Schubert D, Machnik M, Schänzer W, Aurich C.Treatment with the progestin altrenogest is widely used in pregnant mares. The fact that foals born from healthy mares treated with altrenogest until term suffered from neonatal problems raises the question of direct effects of altrenogest on vital functions in the neonate. We have therefore investigated altrenogest concentrations in maternal and neonatal blood plasma and in fetal fluids. Pregnant mares were treated with altrenogest orally once daily (0,088 mg/kg bodyweight, n = 7) or left untreated (n = 8) from 280 d of gestation until foaling. Altrenogest concentration was determined in plas...
Treatment efficacy of trimethoprim sulfamethoxazole, pentoxifylline and altrenogest in experimentally induced equine placentitis.
Theriogenology    April 22, 2010   Volume 74, Issue 3 402-412 doi: 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2010.02.023
Bailey CS, Macpherson ML, Pozor MA, Troedsson MH, Benson S, Giguere S, Sanchez LC, Leblanc MM, Vickroy TW.The objective was to determine if long-term treatment with trimethoprim sulfamethoxazole (antimicrobial), pentoxifylline (anti-inflammatory/anti-cytokine) and altrenogest (synthetic progestin), would improve pregnancy outcome in mares with experimentally induced placentitis. Seventeen normal, pregnant pony mares were enrolled in the study at 280-295 d of pregnancy. Placentitis was induced in all mares by intra-cervical inoculation of Streptococcus equi subsp. zooepidemicus (10(7) CFU). Five mares served as infected, untreated control animals (Group UNTREAT). Twelve mares (Group TREAT) were inf...
Abnormal umbilical cord attachment sites in the mare: a review illustrated by three case reports.
Equine veterinary journal    April 14, 2010   Volume 41, Issue 9 930-939 doi: 10.2746/042516409x471728
Wilsher S, Ousey J, Allen WR.Abnormal cord attachment can be a manifestation of an inappropriate fixation position of the conceptus in the uterus, or it may result from disorientation of the conceptus post fixation. The potential for this resulting in fetal and neonatal compromise is reviewed in the light of previous reports and to which 3 cases within the authors' experience are added.
Reproductive performance measures among Thoroughbred mares in central Kentucky, during the 2004 mating season.
Equine veterinary journal    April 14, 2010   Volume 41, Issue 9 883-888 doi: 10.2746/042516409x456068
Bosh KA, Powell D, Shelton B, Zent W.To improve efficiency at the farm level, a better understanding of how farm management factors impact reproductive performance is important. Objective: To assess reproductive efficiency and effectiveness among Thoroughbred mares in central Kentucky. Methods: A cohort of 1011 mares on 13 farms in central Kentucky was followed during the 2004 mating and 2005 foaling season. Information on farm level practices was collected via interviews with farm managers. Reproductive records were collected for each mare mated to obtain information on mare characteristics. The influence of mare age and status ...
Serum fructosamine concentrations in relation to metabolic changes during late pregnancy and early lactation in mares.
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    March 25, 2010   Volume 123, Issue 3-4 169-173 
Filipović N, Stojević Z, Prvanović N.The changes in blood serum fructosamine concentrations as indicators of glycaemia during a longer period of time were investigated in mares during late pregnancy and early lactation, as well as their relationship to the changes in the concentration of biochemical indicators of energetic status. The samples were taken from eleven mares on 60 +/- 10 and 20 +/- 10 days before foaling, and 20 +/- 10 and 60 +/- 10 days after foaling. Concentrations of serum fructosamine, non-esterified fatty acids and triglycerides were higher during late pregnancy (from P < 0.05 to P < 0.0005), while the con...
Transcriptional profiling of equine endometrium during the time of maternal recognition of pregnancy.
Biology of reproduction    March 24, 2010   Volume 83, Issue 1 102-113 doi: 10.1095/biolreprod.109.081612
Klein C, Scoggin KE, Ealy AD, Troedsson MH.Establishment and maintenance of pregnancy are critically dependent on embryo-maternal communication during the preimplantation period. To gain new insights into this complex process in the horse, transcriptional profiling of Day 13.5 pregnant and cyclic endometrial tissue samples was carried out using custom-designed microarrays. Selected array data were validated using quantitative RT-PCR, and proteins of interest were localized using immunohistochemistry. One hundred and six transcripts were up-regulated, whereas 47 transcripts showed lower expression levels in pregnant mares, that is, were...
Factors affecting the incidence of postpartum oestrus, ovarian activity and reproductive performance in Thoroughbred mares bred at foal heat under Indian subtropical conditions.
Theriogenology    March 6, 2010   Volume 74, Issue 1 90-99 doi: 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2010.01.018
Sharma S, Davies Morel MC, Dhaliwal GS.Decreased reproductive performance due to summer stress is a well known phenomenon in farm livestock. Whether this occurs in the mare and specifically how this might affect postpartum reproductive activity and performance, especially at Foal Heat (FH), is unknown. This study, therefore, aims to investigate this and the factors that might affect postpartum reproductive activity. Reproductive records of 228 Thoroughbred mares (694 mare years) bred in subtropical north-western India were retrospectively analysed. Overt oestrous activity occurred within 21 d postpartum in 92.94% (645/694) of mares...
Recovery of mare oocytes on a fixed biweekly schedule, and resulting blastocyst formation after intracytoplasmic sperm injection.
Theriogenology    March 4, 2010   Volume 73, Issue 8 1116-1126 doi: 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2010.01.013
Jacobson CC, Choi YH, Hayden SS, Hinrichs K.Oocytes may be collected from live mares from either the stimulated preovulatory follicle or from all visible immature follicles. We evaluated the yield of mature oocytes, and of blastocysts after intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI), for both follicle types. In Experiment 1, mares were assigned to Progesterone (1.2g biorelease progesterone weekly) or Control treatments. Transvaginal aspiration of all follicles was performed every 14 d. Overall, 596 follicles were aspirated, with a 54% oocyte recovery rate. There was no difference between treatments in number of follicles punctured (9.0 to ...
Levels of selected T lymphocyte subpopulations in peripheral blood of mares which experienced early embryonic death.
Animal reproduction science    March 3, 2010   Volume 120, Issue 1-4 71-77 doi: 10.1016/j.anireprosci.2010.02.019
Krakowski L, Krawczyk CH, Wrona Z, Dabrowski R, Jarosz Ł.The objective of the present study was to analyse the immune status of mares in the early stages of pregnancy and mares which experienced early embryonic death (EED). Forty-eight fertile purebred Arabian mares were used for the study. The mares were divided into two groups. Group I was the control group composed of 32 mares in the early stages of a normal pregnancy. Group II was composed of 12 mares which had experienced EED. In both groups, subpopulations of T lymphocytes containing CD2(+), CD4(+) and CD8(+) were characterized using flow cytometry. The percentages of CD3(+) lymphocytes (addin...
Determination of heart rate and heart rate variability in the equine fetus by fetomaternal electrocardiography.
Theriogenology    January 27, 2010   Volume 73, Issue 7 973-983 doi: 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2009.11.026
Nagel C, Aurich J, Aurich C.Heart rate is an important parameter of fetal well-being. We have analyzed fetal heart rate (HR) and heart rate variability (HRV) by fetomaternal electrocardiography (ECG) in the horse (Equus caballus) from midpregnancy to foaling. It was the aim of the study to detect changes in the regulation of fetal cardiac activity over time and to establish normal values in undisturbed pregnancies. A total of 22 mares were available for the study. Fetomaternal electrocardiography was a reliable technique to detect cardiac signals in fetuses between Day 173 of gestation and foaling. Fetal HR decreased fro...
Hyperlipaemia in a pregnant mare with suspected masseter myodegeneration.
The Veterinary record    January 26, 2010   Volume 166, Issue 4 116-117 doi: 10.1136/vr.c359
Conwell R.No abstract available
Treatment of persistent mating-induced endometritis in mares with the non-steroid anti-inflammatory drug vedaprofen.
Reproduction in domestic animals = Zuchthygiene    January 16, 2010   Volume 45, Issue 6 e458-e460 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0531.2009.01572.x
Rojer H, Aurich C.Recently, successful treatment of mares with a history of persistent mating-induced endometritis (PMIE) with dexamethasone has been reported. As systemic treatment of horses with glucocorticoids should be handled with caution, we tested the hypothesis that treatment with the non-steroid anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) vedaprofen, an inhibitor of cyclooxygenase-2, may have comparative, positive effects on fertility. Barren mares with a history of repeated PMIE were treated with vedaprofen (n = 8; initially 2 mg/kg bodyweight followed by 1 mg/kg orally twice daily) from 1 day before the first ins...
Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) of equine conceptuses at 14 and 16 days of gestation.
Reproduction, fertility, and development    January 6, 2010   Volume 22, Issue 2 405-415 doi: 10.1071/RD08280
Walter I, Tschulenk W, Budik S, Aurich C.The present study gives a detailed ultrastructural description of equine conceptuses at Day 14 (n = 2) and Day 16 (n = 3) after ovulation. Whereas on Day 14 only primitive structures were seen, on Day 16 neurulation and formation of mesodermal somites had taken place. The ectoderm of the embryo itself and the surrounding trophoblast ectodermal cells were characterised by specific cell surface differentiations. At the embryonic ectodermal cell surface (14 and 16 days) remarkable protruded and fused cytoplasmic projections were seen, typically associated with macropinocytotic events involved in ...
Prolonged estrus suppression by ectopic transplantation of invasive equine trophoblast.
Animal reproduction science    January 1, 2010   Volume 121, Issue 1-2 Suppl 60-61 doi: 10.1016/j.anireprosci.2010.04.172
de Mestre AM, Hanlon D, Adams AP, Runcan E, Leadbeater JC, Tallmadge R, Erb HN, Costa CC, Miller D, Allen WR, Antczak DF.No abstract available
The influence of late pregnancy and lactation on bone metabolism in mares.
Research in veterinary science    December 21, 2009   Volume 88, Issue 3 405-410 doi: 10.1016/j.rvsc.2009.11.008
Filipović N, Stojević Z, Prvanović N, Tucek Z.Pregnancy and lactation are periods of significant influence on bone metabolism that has not been investigated in equines. To examine the influence of late pregnancy and lactation on bone metabolism in mares, the changes in the blood serum/plasma total calcium (Ca), inorganic phosphates (Pi), pyridinoline (Pyd) and 17beta-estradiol (E2) concentration and the bone alkaline phosphatase (BAP) activity were investigated. The samples were taken from 11 mares on 60+/-10 and 20+/-10 days before foaling, and 20+/-10 and 60+/-10 days after foaling. The concentration/activity of Ca, Pi, Pyd and BAP incr...
Successful transfer of day 10 horse embryos: influence of donor-recipient asynchrony on embryo development.
Reproduction (Cambridge, England)    November 30, 2009   Volume 139, Issue 3 575-585 doi: 10.1530/REP-09-0306
Wilsher S, Clutton-Brock A, Allen WR.A total of 78 day 10 horse embryos were transferred non-surgically to recipient mares that had ovulated 9, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2 or 1 day after (negative asynchrony), on the same day (synchronous), or 2 or 4 days before (positive asynchrony) the donor (n=6 or 8 mares per group). Pregnancy rates between 100% (6/6) and 63% (5/8) were seen in recipient mares that were between +2 and -6 days asynchronous. Embryo survival to the heartbeat stage declined in recipients that were -7 days asynchronous and no embryos survived in recipients that were -9 days asynchronous. Irrespective of uterine asynchrony, c...
Theriogenology question of the month. Pregnancy, pyometra, mucometra, hydrometra, hemorrhage, and urometra in Quarter Horse-Paint mare.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    November 17, 2009   Volume 235, Issue 10 1161-1164 doi: 10.2460/javma.235.10.1161
Tranquillo GG, Kelleman AA, Sertich PL.No abstract available
Effect of selenium supplementation and plane of nutrition on mares and their foals: selenium concentrations and glutathione peroxidase.
Journal of animal science    November 6, 2009   Volume 88, Issue 3 991-997 doi: 10.2527/jas.2008-1743
Karren BJ, Thorson JF, Cavinder CA, Hammer CJ, Coverdale JA.To investigate the maternal plane of nutrition and role of Se yeast on muscle Se concentration, plasma glutathione peroxidase (Gsh-Px) activity, and colostrum Se concentration in mares and their foals, 28 Quarter Horse mares (465 to 612 kg of BW, and 6 to 19 yr of age) were used in a study with a randomized complete block design. Mares were blocked by expected foaling date and randomly assigned to dietary treatments within blocks. Dietary treatments were arranged as a 2 x 2 factorial with 2 planes of nutrition, pasture or pasture + grain mix (fed at 0.75% of BW on an as-fed basis) and 2 concen...
Split immunological tolerance to trophoblast.
The International journal of developmental biology    October 31, 2009   Volume 54, Issue 2-3 445-455 doi: 10.1387/ijdb.082795ad
de Mestre A, Noronha L, Wagner B, Antczak DF.Split immunological tolerance refers to states in which an individual is capable of mounting certain types of immune responses to a particular antigenic challenge, but is tolerant of the same antigen in other compartments of the immune system. This concept is applicable to the immunological relationship between mother and fetus, and particularly relevant in equine pregnancy. In pregnant mares, antibody responses to paternal foreign Major Histocompatibility Complex class I antigens are robust, while anti-paternal cytotoxic T cell responses are diminished compared to those mounted by non-pregnan...
A review of implantation and early placentation in the mare.
Placenta    October 22, 2009   Volume 30, Issue 12 1005-1015 doi: 10.1016/j.placenta.2009.09.007
Allen WR, Wilsher S.Constant, self induced mobility throughout the uterine lumen between days 6 and 17 after ovulation, complete envelopment by a self-secreted glycoprotein capsule between days 7 and 30 and 'injection' of specialised, gonadotrophin-secreting trophoblast cells into the maternal endometrium at days 35-37 are three unusual aspects of equine embryogenesis. The outer trophoblast layer of the allantochorion finally establishes a stable, microvillous contact with the lumenal epithelium of the endometrium around days 40-42 and placentation commences thereafter. The allantochorion elongates steadily until...
The molecular phylogeny of uterine serpins and its relationship to evolution of placentation.
FASEB journal : official publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology    October 13, 2009   Volume 24, Issue 2 526-537 doi: 10.1096/fj.09-138453
Padua MB, Kowalski AA, Cañas MY, Hansen PJ.Uterine serpins (USs), designated as SERPINA14, are expressed in the endometrium in response to progesterone. All species identified as having USs exhibit epitheliochorial placentation and are in the Ruminantia and Suidae orders of the Laurasiatheria superorder. The objective was to identify US genes in species within and outside Laurasiatheria and evaluate whether evolution of the US gene was associated with development of the epitheliochorial placenta. Through queries of nucleotide and genomic databases, known US genes were identified (caprine, bovine, porcine, water buffalo), and new US cod...
Effect of altrenogest-treatment of mares in late gestation on adrenocortical function, blood count and plasma electrolytes in their foals.
Equine veterinary journal    October 7, 2009   Volume 41, Issue 6 572-577 doi: 10.2746/042516409x394481
Neuhauser S, Palm F, Ambuehl F, Möstl E, Schwendenwein I, Aurich C.Mares with compromised pregnancies are often treated with altrenogest to prevent abortion. However, there is only limited information about effects on the foal when altrenogest treatment is continued during final maturation of the fetus. Objective: To determine effects of altrenogest treatment during late gestation in mares on maturity, haematology changes, adrenocortical function and serum electrolytes in their newborn foals. Methods: Six mares were treated with altrenogest (0.088 mg/kg bwt) once daily from Day 280 of pregnancy until foaling and 7 mares served as controls. Results: Foals born...
The pattern of embryonic fixation and its relationship to pregnancy loss in thoroughbred mares.
Reproduction in domestic animals = Zuchthygiene    October 1, 2009   Volume 45, Issue 5 e61-e67 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0531.2009.01523.x
Sharma S, Davies Morel MC, Dhaliwal GS, Dadarwal D.Ultrasonographic pregnancy records of 195 mares from six Thoroughbred stud farms, over a period of 7 years were retrospectively analysed to assess the effect of various factors on embryonic vesicle (EV) fixation pattern and pregnancy outcome. Of the total of 746 pregnancies analysed, significantly (p < 0.01) more EV fixations were evident in the right uterine horn than in the left (53.35% vs 46.65% respectively). There was no significant effect of either, the side of ovulation, or age of the mare, on the side of EV fixation. However, EV fixation, was significantly (p < 0.001) more likely...
Two cases of equine pregnancy loss associated with Leptospira infection in England.
The Veterinary record    September 29, 2009   Volume 165, Issue 13 377-378 doi: 10.1136/vr.165.13.377
Whitwell KE, Blunden AS, Miller J, Errington J.No abstract available
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