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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.
The relationship of increased susceptibility of sperm DNA to denaturation and fertility in the stallion.
Theriogenology    March 29, 2000   Volume 50, Issue 6 955-972 doi: 10.1016/s0093-691x(98)00199-x
Love CC, Kenney RM.The relationship between fertility and susceptibility of sperm DNA to denaturation was determined in a group of 84 actively breeding, clinically fertile stallions. Susceptibility of DNA to denaturation was determined using the sperm chromatin structure assay (SCSA). The SCSA measures, mean of alpha-t (mean alpha t), standard deviation of alpha-t (SD alpha t), and the COMP of alpha-t (cells outside the main population)] were significantly correlated with the percentage seasonal pregnancy rate (SPR; mean alpha t, r = -0.24, P < or = 0.05; % COMP alpha t, r = -0.27, P < or = 0.05); percentage pre...
Relationship between ultrasonic characteristics of the corpus luteum, plasma progesterone concentration and early pregnancy diagnosis in Friesian mares.
Theriogenology    March 29, 2000   Volume 52, Issue 4 585-592 doi: 10.1016/s0093-691x(99)00154-5
Sevinga M, Schukken YH, Hesselink JW, Jonker FH.The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the change in cross-sectional area of the early corpus luteum (CL) and progesterone production in relation to subsequent pregnancy diagnosis. The cross-sectional area of the CL of 75 Friesian brood mares was measured by ultrasonography on Day 1 or 2 and Day 8 or 9 after ovulation. The change in cross-sectional area was expressed in a volume ratio. Plasma progesterone concentrations were measured on Days 8 to 9, and ultrasonography to determine pregnancy status was carried out on Day 17. The data obtained were analyzed by using a multiple logisti...
Study of early pregnancy factor (EPF) in equine (Equus caballus).
American journal of reproductive immunology (New York, N.Y. : 1989)    March 29, 2000   Volume 43, Issue 3 174-179 doi: 10.1111/j.8755-8920.2000.430307.x
Ohnuma K, Yokoo M, Ito K, Nambo Y, Miyake YI, Komatsu M, Takahashi J.Early pregnancy factor (EPF) is an immunosuppressive protein detected in the early pregnancy serum. We have already reported that we developed the rosette inhibition test for mare EPF and detected EPF in thoroughbreds. The aim of this study was to determine whether or not our method could be used clinically. Methods: The rosette inhibition test for equine EPF was carried out on serum from six nonpregnant and six pregnant Shetland ponies, a female and a male Chinese pony, and four nonpregnant and 13 pregnant thoroughbred mares. In the thoroughbreds sera were collected during the pregnancy perio...
Sperm transport and survival in the mare: a review.
Theriogenology    March 29, 2000   Volume 50, Issue 5 807-818 doi: 10.1016/s0093-691x(98)00185-x
Troedsson MH, Liu IK, Crabo BG.After the deposition of semen in the mare's uterus, spermatozoa must be transported to the site of fertilization, be maintained in the female tract until ovulation occurs, and be prepared to fertilize the released ovum. Sperm motility, myometrial contractions, and a spontaneous post-mating uterine inflammation are important factors for the transport and survival of spermatozoa in the mare's reproductive tract. Fertilizable sperm are present in the oviduct within 4 h after insemination. At this time, the uterus is the site of a hostile inflammatory environment. Our data suggest that spermatozoa...
Fertility comparison between breeding at 24 hours or at 24 and 48 hours after collection with cooled equine semen.
Theriogenology    March 29, 2000   Volume 50, Issue 5 693-698 doi: 10.1016/s0093-691x(98)00174-5
Shore MD, Macpherson ML, Combes GB, Varner DD, Blanchard TL.It has become a common practice in the equine breeding industry to send 2 insemination doses for breeding with transported cooled semen, one to be used for the initial insemination upon arrival, and the other to be held a second insemination the next day. One fertile stallion and 36 fertile mares were used to determine if breeding once with 1 dose of semen cooled for 24 h would improve fertility compared with breeding twice, 1 d apart, with half the dose of semen cooled for 24 h on the first day of breeding and half cooled for 48 h on the second day of breeding. Mares were given two intramuscu...
Use of prostaglandin E2 to ripen the cervix of the mare prior to induction of parturition.
Theriogenology    March 29, 2000   Volume 50, Issue 6 897-904 doi: 10.1016/s0093-691x(98)00194-0
Rigby S, Love C, Carpenter K, Varner D, Blanchard T.Eleven light-breed pregnant mares (335 to 347 d gestaton) were used to evaluate the use of prostaglandin E2 as a cervical ripening agent prior to induction of parturition during the months of April and May. Six hours prior to induction, each mare's cervix was examined per vagina for softness and dilation. Each mare was then assigned to 1 of 2 treatment groups: Group PGE mares (n = 7) received 2.0 to 2.5 mg prostaglandin E2 deposited intracervically; Group SAL mares (n = 4) received 0.5 mL of sterile NaCl deposited intracervically. Six hours later, the mares were readied for parturition by wrap...
Measurement of early pregnancy factor activity for monitoring the viability of the equine embryo.
Theriogenology    March 29, 2000   Volume 50, Issue 2 255-262 doi: 10.1016/s0093-691x(98)00133-2
Takagi M, Nishimura K, Oguri N, Ohnuma K, Ito K, Takahashi J, Yasuda Y, Miyazawa K, Sato K.The viability of embryos before flushing from donor mares (n = 5) and after transfer to recipient mares (n = 7) was monitored in mare serum by detecting early pregnancy factor (EPF) using the rosette inhibition test (RIT). The EPF activity was measured in donor mares before and after natural mating at natural estrus; after ovulation on Days 2, 5 and 8; and after embryo flushing (Day 8) on Days 8, 9, 10 and 13 after ovulation. The collected embryos were transferred immediately after flushing. The EPF activity in recipient mares were measured on the day of transfer and after embryo transfer on D...
Effect of sperm number and frequency of insemination on fertility of mares inseminated with cooled semen.
Theriogenology    March 25, 2000   Volume 49, Issue 4 743-749 doi: 10.1016/S0093-691X(98)00023-5
Squires EL, Brubaker JK, McCue PM, Pickett BW.In this study, we tested the hypothesis that insemination of mares with twice the recommended dose of cooled semen (2 x 10(9) spermatozoa) would result in higher pregnancy rates than insemination with a single dose (1 x 10(9) spermatozoa) or with 1 x 10(9) spermatozoa on each of 2 consecutive days. A total of 83 cycles from 61 mares was used. Mares were randomly assigned to 1 of 3 treatment groups when a 40-mm follicle was detected by palpation and ultrasonography. Mares in Group 1 were inseminated with 1 x 10(9) progressively motile spermatozoa that had been cooled in a passive cooling unit t...
Production of embryos by assisted reproduction in the horse.
Theriogenology    March 25, 2000   Volume 49, Issue 1 13-21 doi: 10.1016/s0093-691x(97)00398-1
Hinrichs K.In vitro embryo production is not yet successful in the horse, largely due to low rates of fertilization in vitro. However, methods to produce embryos from isolated oocytes have been developed. Oocytes may be recovered from living mares by aspiration of the dominant preovulatory follicle by trans-abdominal puncture, and from both preovulatory and immature follicles by trans-vaginal ultrasound-guided puncture. Transfer of in vivo-matured oocytes to the oviducts of bred recipient mares has resulted in good pregnancy rates (75-85%). Little work has been done on transfer of horse oocytes matured i...
Effect of insemination dose on pregnancy rate in mares.
Theriogenology    March 25, 2000   Volume 49, Issue 5 1071-1074 doi: 10.1016/s0093-691x(98)00055-7
Gahne S, Gånheim A, Malmgren L.Different insemination doses have been used for artificial insemination(AI) in horses. Since the insemination dose can affect the pregnancy rate, it is important to ensure that an adequate dose be used regardless of the type of inseminationprotocol used. The aim of this study was to find out if it is possible to decrease the insemination dose from 500 x 10(6) progressively motile spermatozoa to 300 x 10(6) progressively motile spermatozoa and still maintain an acceptable pregnancy rate when using extended fresh semen. Thirteen stallions of known fertility and a well-defined group of 64 mares w...
Effect of spermatozoal concentration and number on fertility of frozen equine semen.
Theriogenology    March 25, 2000   Volume 49, Issue 8 1537-1543 doi: 10.1016/s0093-691x(98)00099-5
Leipold SD, Graham JK, Squires EL, McCue PM, Brinsko SP, Vanderwall DK.Information on the number of motile spermatozoa needed to maximize pregnancy rates for frozen-thawed stallion semen is limited. Furthermore, concentration of spermatozoa per 0.5-mL straw has been shown to affect post-thaw motility (7). The objectives of this study were 1) to compare the effect of increasing the concentration of spermatozoa in 0.5-mL straws from 400 to 1,600 x 10(6) spermatozoa/mL on pregnancy rate of mares, and 2) to determine whether increasing the insemination dose from approximately 320 to 800 million progressively motile spermatozoa after thawing would increase pregnancy r...
Effect of oxytocin, prostaglandin F2 alpha, and clenbuterol on uterine dynamics in mares.
Theriogenology    March 25, 2000   Volume 50, Issue 4 521-534 doi: 10.1016/s0093-691x(98)00158-7
Gastal MO, Gastal EL, Torres CA, Ginther OJ.The effects of oxytocin, prostaglandin F2 alpha (PGF2 alpha), and clenbuterol on uterine contractility and tone during anestrus and diestrus, and during mobility and postfixation of the embryonic vesicle were studied in 51 pony mares. Contractility was assessed by scoring real-time ultrasound images, and tone was assessed by transrectal digital compression. Scoring was done by an operator who had no knowledge of treatment assignments. In anovulatory mares primed with progesterone for 16 d, oxytocin did not significantly alter contractility but did stimulate an increase in tone, whereas clenbut...
Sperm transport and survival in the mare.
Theriogenology    March 25, 2000   Volume 49, Issue 5 905-915 doi: 10.1016/s0093-691x(98)00040-5
Troedsson MH, Liu IK, Crabo BG.Following the deposition of semen in the mares uterus, spermatozoa must be transported to the site of fertilization, be maintained in the female tract until ovulation occurs, and be prepared to fertilize the released ovum. Sperm motility, myometrial contractions, and a spontaneous post-mating uterine inflammation are important factors for the transport and survival of spermatozoa in the mares reproductive tract. Fertilizable sperm are present in the oviduct within 4 hours after insemination. At this time, the uterus is the site of a hostile inflammatory environment. Our data suggest that sperm...
Detection of Borna disease virus in a pregnant mare and her fetus.
Veterinary microbiology    March 23, 2000   Volume 72, Issue 3-4 207-216 doi: 10.1016/s0378-1135(99)00206-0
Hagiwara K, Kamitani W, Takamura S, Taniyama H, Nakaya T, Tanaka H, Kirisawa R, Iwai H, Ikuta K.A pregnant mare showing pyrexia, reduced appetite, ataxia and paresis was euthanized and examined for the presence of Borna disease virus (BDV). Her brain, showing multiple neuronal degeneration and necrosis with hemorrhage, and the histologically normal brain of the fetus were both positive for BDV RNA. The BDV nucleotide sequences were identical in the mare and fetus in the second open reading frame (ORF). This is the first report of the possible vertical transmission of BDV in a horse.
Birth of a foal after oocyte transfer to a nonovulating, hormone-treated recipient mare.
Theriogenology    March 23, 2000   Volume 51, Issue 7 1251-1258 doi: 10.1016/S0093-691X(99)00069-2
Hinrichs K, Provost PJ, Torello EM.A nonovulating, hormone-treated mare was used successfully as an oocyte recipient. The mare's ovarian activity was suppressed using progesterone and estrogen treatment. This treatment was stopped, then estrogen was administered for 3 d prior to the transfer. An oocyte was recovered from the follicle of a donor mare and was transferred via flank laparotomy into the recipient's oviduct. The recipient mare was inseminated 7 h before transfer. The recipient was treated with intramuscular progesterone from the day after transfer until 47 d after transfer, and then with oral altrenogest until 150 d ...
The current status of equine embryo transfer.
Theriogenology    March 23, 2000   Volume 51, Issue 1 91-104 doi: 10.1016/s0093-691x(98)00234-9
Squires EL, McCue PM, Vanderwall D.The use of embryo transfer in the horse has increased steadily over the past two decades. However, several unique biological features as well as technical problems have limited its widespread use in the horse as compared with that in the cattle industry. Factors that affect embryo recovery include the day of recovery, number of ovulations, age of the donor and the quality of sire's semen. Generally, embryo recoveries are performed 7 or 8 d after ovulation unless the embryos are to be frozen, in which case recovery is performed 6 d after ovulation. Most embryos are recovered from single-ovulati...
Administration of oxytocin immediately after insemination does not improve pregnancy rates in mares bred by fertile or subfertile stallions.
Theriogenology    March 23, 2000   Volume 51, Issue 6 1143-1150 doi: 10.1016/s0093-691x(99)80017-x
Rigby S, Hill J, Miller C, Thompson J, Varner D, Blanchard T.It is probable that reduced pregnancy rates in mares bred to subfertile stallions is attributable, in part, to the reduced number of normal spermatozoa that colonize the oviduct. Administration of oxytocin stimulates both uterine and oviductal contractility. The hypothesis that oxytocin may enhance sperm transport to/into the oviducts, and thereby increase pregnancy rates, was tested in 2 trials. For both trials, fertile estrous mares with follicles > or = 35 mm in diameter were inseminated once at 24 h after administration of 1500 to 2000 U hCG. The inseminate dose was limited to 100 milli...
Effect of equine chorionic gonadotropin on weaning-to-first service interval and litter size of female swine.
Theriogenology    March 23, 2000   Volume 51, Issue 6 1175-1182 doi: 10.1016/s0093-691x(99)80020-x
Sechin A, Deschamps JC, Lucia T, Aleixo JA, Bordignon V.We evaluated the effect of PMSG on the weaning-to-first service interval, total litter size and born alive litter size in swine. Four doses of PMSG (0, 500, 750 and 1,000 IU) were administered intramuscularly after weaning to sows at 3 different farms, grouped by parities (1, 2 and 3 or higher) and 2 distinct time periods. The associations among main effects and response variables were assessed by analysis of variance. Polynomial orthogonal terms were used to adjust the estimates of weaning-to-first service interval, total litter size and born alive litter size for the interaction effect of pa...
[Relevance of infection with equine herpesvirus 1 (EHV-1) in a German thoroughbred stud: vaccination, abortion and diagnosis].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    March 22, 2000   Volume 113, Issue 2 53-59 
Schröer U, Lange A, Glatzel P, Ludwig H, Borchers K.The aim of the present study was to clarify whether an EHV-1 induced abortion can be prognosticated by an increase of antibody titres, virus shedding and/or viraemia and whether the current abortion diagnostic is suitable. In this context the immune response post immunization and a possible reactivation were of great interest. For this purpose blood samples of 32 mares between the ages of 5-21 years were regularly investigated during a period of two years before and after vaccination and pregnancy. Neutralization tests, indirect immunofluorescence tests as well as PCR and virus isolation were ...
Theriogenology question of the month. Premature birth attributable to placental insufficiency that resulted from establishment of pregnancy in the uterine body with subsequent villous atrophy.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    March 15, 2000   Volume 216, Issue 6 833-835 
DiGrassie WA, Dascanio JJ, Ley WB, Newman SJ, Prater DA.No abstract available
Immune cell populations in the equine corpus luteum throughout the oestrous cycle and early pregnancy: an immunohistochemical and flow cytometric study.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    February 26, 2000   Volume 117, Issue 2 281-290 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.1170281
Lawler DF, Hopkins J, Watson ED.Recent evidence indicates that the cells of the immune system and their large network of secretory products, or cytokines, play an active role in the ovary throughout the oestrous cycle. In the present study, immune cell populations (T and B lymphocytes, macrophages, granulocytes and eosinophils) and expression of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II were investigated in corpora lutea from mares in early (days 2-4), mid- (days 7-10) and late (days 12-14) dioestrus, the post-luteolytic phase (days 16-17) and early pregnancy. The number of T lymphocytes within the corpus luteum increa...
In vitro and xenogenous capacitation-like changes of fresh, cooled, and cryopreserved stallion sperm as assessed by a chlortetracycline stain.
Journal of andrology    February 12, 2000   Volume 21, Issue 1 45-52 
Parker NA, Bailey TL, Bowen JM, Ley WB, Purswell BJ, Dascanio JJ.Like the human female, the mare experiences reproductive tract pathology that may sometimes be circumvented by the use of assisted reproductive technologies (ARTs). One such technology, gamete intrafallopian transfer (GIFT), may be used in mares that exhibit ovulatory, oviductal, or uterine abnormalities that limit the use of common ARTs, such as embryo transfer. Homologous GIFT has been successfully performed in the horse; however, the logistics, costs, and associated risks of surgically transferring gametes to the oviducts of a recipient mare are considerably high. Use of a less costly speci...
The inability of some synthetic progestagens to maintain pregnancy in the mare.
Equine veterinary journal    February 8, 2000   Volume 32, Issue 1 83-85 doi: 10.2746/042516400777612035
McKinnon AO, Lescun TB, Walker JH, Vasey JR, Allen WR.No abstract available
The teeth of the horse: evolution and anatomo-morphological and radiographic study of their development in the foetus.
Anatomia, histologia, embryologia    February 1, 2000   Volume 28, Issue 5-6 273-280 doi: 10.1046/j.1439-0264.1999.00204.x
Soana S, Gnudi G, Bertoni G.The aim of this work was to study the ontogenetic process in teeth from their early appearance in the ossifying matrix of the mandible and maxilla, in different foetuses of scalar ages. Radiographic examinations of the skull and mandible hemisections were performed and the latero-medial (LM) and dorsoventral (DV) projections for the skull and mandible were analysed. A high-definition film-screen combination was used for this study. The exposure values ranged from 35 kV/6 mAs to 58 kV/10 mAs, according to the size of the skulls and their degree of ossification. The first dental germ observed wa...
Changes in equine endometrial oestrogen receptor alpha and progesterone receptor mRNAs during the oestrous cycle, early pregnancy and after treatment with exogenous steroids.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    January 25, 2000   Volume 117, Issue 1 135-142 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.1170135
McDowell KJ, Adams MH, Adam CY, Simpson KS.Two experiments were performed to determine changes in the abundance of oestrogen and progesterone receptor (ER alpha and PR) mRNAs in equine endometrium during the oestrous cycle and early pregnancy, and under the influence of exogenous steroids. In Expt 1, endometrial biopsies were obtained from non-mated mares during oestrus and at days 5, 10 and 15 after ovulation, and from pregnant mares at days 10, 15 and 20 after ovulation. There were overall effects of day on the abundance of ER alpha (P = 0.0001) and PR (P = 0.0014) mRNAs. The amount of ER alpha mRNA decreased at day 10 of pregnancy, ...
Cell proliferation patterns during development of the equine placenta.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    January 25, 2000   Volume 117, Issue 1 143-152 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.1170143
Gerstenberg C, Allen WR, Stewart F.Placentation involves considerable growth and reorganization of both maternal and fetal tissues. In this investigation, immunohistochemical localization of the proliferation marker Ki-67 antigen was used to monitor cell division during placentation in mares. Endometrial biopsies were obtained from eight mares between day 14 and day 26 of pregnancy and from eight anoestrous mares that had been treated with various combinations of progesterone and oestrogen. Samples of endometrium and fetal membranes were obtained from 19 mares carrying normal horse conceptuses between day 30 and day 250 of gest...
The effects of oxytocin and progestagens on myometrial contractility in vitro during equine pregnancy.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 2000   Issue 56 681-691 
Ousey JC, Freestone N, Fowden AL, Mason WT, Rossdale PD.Progesterone or progestagens are thought to maintain myometrial quiescence in pregnant mares, although this has not been proven. In the present study, the contractility of the equine myometrium was tested in vitro using samples collected from pregnant mares (n=33) between day 68 and day 340 of gestation. Myometrial samples were equilibrated in aerated Krebs buffer and subjected to one or more of these treatments: (i) oxytocin only; (ii) initial oxytocin treatment followed by combined oxytocin and progesterone or another progestagen; and (iii) initial oxytocin treatment followed by Krebs buffer...
Identification of proteins in the equine embryonic capsule.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 2000   Issue 56 601-606 
Herrler A, Stewart F, Crossett B, Pell JM, Ellis PD, Beier HM, Allen WR.An acellular embryonic capsule envelops equine conceptuses between day 6 and day 23 after ovulation. As all of the factors mediating embryo-mother signalling must pass through the capsule, it acts like a 'mailbox'. Therefore, we have started to map the proteins in this special extracellular matrix at the interface between mother and embryo. In the present study, one- and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis were used to examine a range of proteins. Use of western blotting identified three specific proteins in the capsules of equine conceptuses recovered on day 16 after ovulation: insulin-like g...
Differential gene expression in day 12 and day 15 equine conceptuses.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 2000   Issue 56 539-547 
Simpson KS, Adams MH, Behrendt-Adam CY, Baker CB, McDowell KJ.Complex changes in gene expression must occur at the proper time and in the appropriate tissues for pregnancy to be successful. Therefore, research aimed at defining the regulation of gene expression in conceptuses is of critical importance. However, information on developmentally regulated changes in gene expression in horse conceptuses is sparse and inadequate. In the present study, suppression subtractive hybridization was used to identify genes that are expressed more highly at day 15 than on day 12 of gestation. This period encompasses maternal recognition of pregnancy and the beginning o...
Intra- and inter-stallion variation in sperm morphology and their relationship with fertility.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 2000   Issue 56 93-100 
Love CC, Varner DD, Thompson JA.Dismount semen samples were collected from Thoroughbred stallions during the breeding season to determine the magnitude and significance of the variation in sperm morphology within (intra-) and among (inter-) stallions. The degree of intra-stallion variation in sperm morphology during the breeding season was substantial (coefficient of variation: 20%; range 8-56%), but did not affect the day-to-day fertility of sperm samples taken from the same stallion (intra-stallion). This variability did not affect the pregnancy rate of the mares with which each stallion was mated. The degree of interstall...
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