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Topic:Reproduction

Reproduction in horses encompasses the biological processes and mechanisms involved in the breeding and development of equine offspring. This includes the study of reproductive anatomy, physiology, and endocrinology in both mares and stallions. Key areas of interest include the estrous cycle, ovulation, conception, gestation, and parturition. Researchers also examine factors influencing fertility, reproductive technologies such as artificial insemination and embryo transfer, and management practices that impact reproductive success. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the physiological, genetic, and environmental aspects of equine reproduction.
Immunochemical studies of equine chorionic gonadotropin (eCG), eCG alpha, and eCG beta.
Endocrinology    January 1, 1993   Volume 132, Issue 1 205-211 doi: 10.1210/endo.132.1.7678214
Couture L, Lemonnier JP, Troalen F, Roser JF, Bousfield GR, Bellet D, Bidart JM.The equine (e) placental glycoprotein hormone eCG plays a critical though not completely understood role during the first trimester of gestation in mares. In the present work, we have developed immunoradiometric assays (m-IRMAs) for detection of eCG, eCG alpha, and eCG beta using combinations of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) specific for epitopes that reside on free and/or combined subunits. The free eCG alpha m-IRMA was based on AHT20 mAb, specific for the free alpha-subunit of all species, and 125I-labeled ECG01 mAb, which recognizes both free and combined alpha-subunit from equine and primat...
Advancing the time of ovulation in the mare with a short-term implant releasing the GnRH analogue deslorelin.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 1 65-68 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb02904.x
Meinert C, Silva JF, Kroetz I, Klug E, Trigg TE, Hoppen HO, Jöchle W.A small, biocompatible and short-term implant releasing 1.5 mg or 2.25 mg of the GnRH analogue deslorelin was evaluated in 140 Hanoverian (warm blooded) mares during the 1990 breeding season (Study I). Mares in oestrus and with a follicle 40 +/- 2 mm in diameter were assigned alternately to treatment (70) or remained as untreated controls. Implants were administered subcutaneously, and intervals to ovulation determined by rectal examination and ultrasound at 12-h intervals. Since results with both doses of deslorelin were similar, data were pooled. Deslorelin implantation resulted in ovulation...
Hypertrophic osteopathy in three horses and a pony.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    December 15, 1992   Volume 201, Issue 12 1900-1904 
Lavoie JP, Carlson GP, George L.Hypertrophic osteopathy was diagnosed in 3 horses and in a pony, ranging in age from 8 to 21 years. There were 2 females, 1 sexually intact male, and 1 gelding. In 3 animals, hypertrophic osteopathy was associated with pulmonary abscesses, bronchogenic squamous cell carcinoma, and ovarian granulosa-cell tumor, respectively, and resulted in death or euthanasia. Duration of the condition ranged from 1 to 4 months. In 1 horse, hypertrophic osteopathy was believed to be secondary to pregnancy, and resolved following uncomplicated delivery of a live foal.
Epididymal swelling attributable to generalized lymphosarcoma in a stallion.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    December 15, 1992   Volume 201, Issue 12 1913-1915 
Held JP, McCracken MD, Toal R, Latimer F.Aspermia was diagnosed in a 12-year-old Thoroughbred stallion with generalized lymphosarcoma. Invasion of the epididymus by neoplastic cells caused thickening and enlargement of both epididymes. The testes were not affected. The nodular ultrasonographic architecture was similar to that in previously reported cases of infectious epididymitis.
[Prenatal development of the horse ovary].
Anatomia, histologia, embryologia    December 1, 1992   Volume 21, Issue 4 306-313 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0264.1992.tb00462.x
Knospe C, Budras KD.To answer the many open questions concerning the development of the horse's ovary, first the prenatal development was investigated. It resulted that follicles derive from the germinal epithelium and its cords, whereas the Leydig cells and the rete blastema originate from the mesonephros. In the second third of pregnancy the Leydig cells undergo an enormous proliferation, in the last third they degenerate. However this degeneration is not connected with the postnatal development of the ovulation groove.
Influence of exogenous progesterone on early embryonic development in the mare.
Theriogenology    December 1, 1992   Volume 38, Issue 6 1055-1063 doi: 10.1016/0093-691x(92)90119-c
Ball BA, Miller PG, Daels PF.The influence of exogenous progesterone on the development of equine oviductal embryos was determined based upon the recovery of Day-7 uterine blastocysts from treated mares (n=13) that were given 450 mg progesterone daily between Days 0 and 6 and from untreated control mares (n=13). Daily administration of 450 mg progesterone in oil significantly (P<0.02) increased serum progesterone concentrations in the treated mares. There was no significant difference in the recovery rate of Day-7 embryos between treated and control mares (8/13 versus 6/13, respectively). Embryonic development, assesse...
Developmental regulation of class I major histocompatibility complex antigen expression by equine trophoblastic cells.
Differentiation; research in biological diversity    December 1, 1992   Volume 52, Issue 1 69-78 doi: 10.1111/j.1432-0436.1992.tb00501.x
Donaldson WL, Oriol JG, Plavin A, Antczak DF.Between days 36-38 of pregnancy equine trophoblastic cells of the chorionic girdle migrate and form endometrial cups. Just prior to invasion, the chorionic girdle cells express high levels of polymorphic, paternally inherited, major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I antigens. Their descendents, the mature, invasive trophoblast cells of the endometrial cups, however, express low or undetectable levels of MHC class I antigens by day 44 of pregnancy. Experiments with MHC compatible pregnancies, the study of residual chorionic girdle cells that had failed to invade the endometrium and remai...
Reduction and reoxidation of equine gonadotropin alpha-subunits.
Endocrinology    December 1, 1992   Volume 131, Issue 6 2986-2998 doi: 10.1210/endo.131.6.1280209
Bousfield GR, Ward DN.Ovine (o) and equine (e) LH alpha-subunits were reduced and reoxidized using conditions known to be effective for bovine and human alpha-subunits. The major product of oLH alpha refolding was alpha-subunit monomer. In contrast, eLH alpha formed a 121,000 mol wt aggregate. Monomeric eLH alpha was recovered, but in greatly reduced yield. To test the effects of carbohydrate variation on the aggregation of equine alpha-subunits, all of the equine gonadotropin alpha-subunits (eFSH alpha, eCG alpha, eLH alpha, and free alpha-subunit) were reduced and reoxidized. In each case, the major product was t...
Cryptococcal pneumonia and abortion in an equine fetus.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    November 15, 1992   Volume 201, Issue 10 1591-1592 
Blanchard PC, Filkins M.Cryptococcus neoformans was the causative agent of pneumonia in a 9-month-old equine fetus aborted by a healthy American Paint mare. Endometritis was diagnosed on biopsy, and vaginal specimens obtained for culture were Cryptococcus-positive 1 month following abortion but not 5 months after abortion. Infection resolved without treatment between 1 and 5 months after abortion, and the mare was bred the following year and delivered a live premature foal without evidence of Cryptococcus infection.
In vivo evaluation of biodegradable progesterone microspheres in mares.
Pharmaceutical research    November 1, 1992   Volume 9, Issue 11 1502-1506 doi: 10.1023/a:1015879400962
Gupta PK, Mehta RC, Douglas RH, DeLuca PP.No abstract available
Evaluation of progesterone treatment to create a model for equine endometritis.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1992   Volume 24, Issue 6 457-461 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1992.tb02876.x
Hinrichs K, Spensley MS, McDonough PL.To investigate a model for equine endometritis, 12 mares with normal reproductive tracts were divided into 2 groups. All mares received progesterone in oil, 250 mg im, daily. At 5 days after initiation of progesterone administration, the uteri were inoculated with 10(6) colony forming units of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. The day of inoculation was designated Day 0. On Day 6, endometrial swab samples yielded P. aeruginosa in 5 mares; samples from the other 7 mares yielded heavy growth of Escherichia coli, Streptococcus zooepidemicus, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Enterobacter spp., Citrobacter diversus, S...
Characterization of equine zona pellucida glycoproteins by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and immunological techniques.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    November 1, 1992   Volume 96, Issue 2 815-825 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.0960815
Miller CC, Fayrer-Hosken RA, Timmons TM, Lee VH, Caudle AB, Dunbar BS.This study was designed to explore the composition of the equine zona pellucida (EZP) by one- and two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (1D- and 2D-PAGE), silver staining and immunoblotting techniques. Antral follicles palpable on frozen-thawed equine ovaries were aspirated with a needle and syringe, and the resultant follicular fluid, cellular material and oocytes were pooled. Oocytes were placed in Petri dishes, moved by narrow-bore pipette to droplets of phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) and mechanically cleaned of cumulus cells. The EZP from these collected oocytes was solubiliz...
Dose-response effects of gonadotropin-releasing hormone on plasma concentrations of gonadotropins and testosterone in fertile and subfertile stallions.
Journal of andrology    November 1, 1992   Volume 13, Issue 6 543-550 
Roser JF, Hughes JP.Five fertile and five subfertile stallions were treated with a single intravenous injection of saline the first week followed by a single intravenous injection of varying doses of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (5, 10, 25, 100, 500 micrograms) given in a randomized fashion over the next 5 weeks during the nonbreeding season. Blood samples were collected periodically before and after treatment for analysis of luteinizing hormone, follicle stimulating hormone, and testosterone content by radioimmunoassay. Before treatment, semen samples were collected every other day for 3 weeks for analysis of ...
Ultrasonographic and quantitative histologic assessment of sequelae to testicular biopsy in stallions.
American journal of veterinary research    November 1, 1992   Volume 53, Issue 11 2094-2101 
DelVento VR, Amann RP, Trotter GW, Veeramachaneni DN, Squires EL.A sample of testicular parenchymal tissue, approximately 2 x 7 x 7 mm, was aseptically removed from 1 testis in each of 9 stallions on day 0. Slight to moderate hemorrhage from the tunica albuginea was observed in 8 stallions, but bleeding from the parenchyma was detected in only 2 stallions. Stallions were castrated 27 days later. Normal development of granulation tissue was evident at the biopsy site, but hematomas were not observed. In situ measurement of the widths of the right and left testes, total scrotal width, and evaluation of testicular echogenicity during ultrasonography were varia...
The effect of transcervical uterine manipulations on establishment of uterine infection in mares under the influence of progesterone.
Theriogenology    November 1, 1992   Volume 38, Issue 5 945-950 doi: 10.1016/0093-691x(92)90168-q
McDonnell AM, Watson ED.Four pony mares were used in a cross-over study to investigate the effect of different treatments on experimentally-induced endometritis. The mares were treated with progesterone to facilitate establishment of uterine infections. They received an intrauterine infusion of Streptococcus zooepidemicus 5 days after the start of progesterone therapy. Five days later, they were treated by intrauterine infusions of 2 g ampicillin in 50 ml sterile water or by sterile water without antibiotic for 3 consecutive days. Prior to infusion of Strep. zooepidemicus, no bacteria were cultured from the uteri of ...
Isolation of Ehrlichia risticii from the aborted fetus of an infected mare.
The Veterinary record    October 17, 1992   Volume 131, Issue 16 370 doi: 10.1136/vr.131.16.370
Long MT, Goetz TE, Kakoma I, Whitely HE, Lock TF, Holland CJ, Ewert KM, Baker GJ, Foreman JH.No abstract available
Measurement of the cytotoxic effects of different strains of Mycoplasma equigenitalium on the equine uterine tube using a calmodulin assay.
Canadian journal of veterinary research = Revue canadienne de recherche veterinaire    October 1, 1992   Volume 56, Issue 4 331-338 
Bermúdez VM, Miller RB, Rosendal S, Fernando MA, Johnson WH, O'Brien PJ.The cytopathic effects induced by five strains of Mycoplasma equigenitalium for cells of equine uterine tube explants were tested by measuring changes in cellular and extracellular concentrations of calmodulin (CaM). Calmodulin concentrations in samples of total homogenate (TH) and total homogenate supernates (THS) of the infected equine uterine tube explants were significantly lower than respective measurements on noninfected controls. In tissue culture medium fractions (TCM) of some infected explants, CaM concentrations were significantly higher than noninfected controls (p > 0.95). The r...
Ovarian mass in three mares with regular estrous cycles.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    October 1, 1992   Volume 201, Issue 7 1043-1044 
Nie GJ, Momont H.Three mares with regular estrous cycles and a large ovary were examined. In each case, the ovary was composed of a single, fluid-filled cavity with a thick capsule. The ovarian mass was surgically removed from each mare. Histologic diagnosis of each mass was different.
Complications of dystocia in a mare.
Australian veterinary journal    October 1, 1992   Volume 69, Issue 10 260-261 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1992.tb09877.x
Duncan IF.No abstract available
Streptomycin-resistant Escherichia coli as a marker of vulvovestibular contamination of endometrial culture swabs in the mare.
Canadian journal of veterinary research = Revue canadienne de recherche veterinaire    October 1, 1992   Volume 56, Issue 4 308-312 
Waelchli RO, Corboz L, Doebeli M.To investigate the vulvovestibular contamination of endometrial culture swabs in the mare, a liquid culture of a streptomycin-resistant strain of Escherichia coli was applied to the vulvovestibular area of mares and used as a marker of contamination of endometrial culture swabs. Prior to taking endometrial swabs, the perineal area was washed with soap, rinsed with water, and dried. Endometrial culture swabs were taken from mares that were in anestrus or diestrus and from mares that were in estrus. When a manual transvaginal swabbing technique was used, 22 of 24 endometrial swab specimens from ...
[Ionized calcium and total calcium in the blood of cattle, sheep, swine and horses of different ages, reproductive stages and uses].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    October 1, 1992   Volume 105, Issue 10 328-332 
Zepperitz H, Gürtler H.Concentrations of ionized calcium (Cai) in blood and of total calcium (Ca(t)) in serum were determined in 99 cattle, 58 sheep, 74 pigs and 59 horses of different age groups and reproductive periods as well as kinds of use of the animals. The values of Cai in blood in the groups taken into account for comparison of species decreased significantly in the order dairy cows < ewes < sows < horses. In cattle and pigs, there were significant differences in the Cai-level, according to age with the youngest animals having the highest values. In cows from the fourth lactation onward, one day post partum...
Initiation of superovulation in mares 5 or 12 days after ovulation using equine pituitary extract with or without GnRH analogue.
Theriogenology    October 1, 1992   Volume 38, Issue 4 695-710 doi: 10.1016/0093-691x(92)90032-m
Dippert KD, Hofferer S, Palmer E, Jasko DJ, Squires EL.Cyclic mares were assigned to 1 of 3 treatments (n=15 per group): Group 1 received equine pituitary extract (EPE; 25 mg, i.m.) on Day 5 after ovulation; Group 2 received EPE on Day 12 after ovulation; while Group 3 received 3.3 mg of GnRH analogue (buserelin implant) on the day of ovulation and 25 mg, i.m. EPE on Day 12. Mares in each group were given 10 mg PGF2alpha on the first and second day of EPE treatment. The EPE treatment was continued daily until the first spontaneous ovulation, at which time 3,300 IU of human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) were given to induce further ovulations. Mares...
Involvement of interleukin 2 receptors in conceptus-derived suppression of T and B cell proliferation in horses.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    September 11, 1992   Volume 96, Issue 1 309-322 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.0960309
Roth TL, White KL, Thompson DL, Rahmanian S, Horohov DW.The mechanism by which a horse conceptus-derived immunosuppressive factor (HCS) of M(r) > 100,000 inhibits lymphocyte proliferation was investigated. The factor was obtained from the culture supernatants of 20-day-old horse conceptuses; activity, identified by reduced uptake of [3H]thymidine by mitogen-stimulated lymphocytes, was greatest (P < 0.01) in cultures stimulated by mitogen from pokeweed. HCS also suppressed cell proliferation stimulated by phytohaemagglutinin (P 0.05). Data from a fluorescence-activated cell sorter indicated that supplementation with HCS reduced the number of ...
Immunochemical study of equine chorionic gonadotropin (eCG/PMSG): antigenic determinants on alpha- and beta-subunits.
Biochimica et biophysica acta    September 4, 1992   Volume 1159, Issue 1 74-80 doi: 10.1016/0167-4838(92)90077-q
Maurel MC, Ban E, Bidart JM, Combarnous Y.In the present study we have established an immunochemical mapping of equine Chorionic Gonadotropin (eCG/PMSG) using three monoclonal antibodies (mAbs), namely the antibodies ECG01, E10 and D7, raised against the native hormone. These antibodies do not bind to reduced, alkylated hormone, suggesting that they recognize discontinuous rather than continuous epitopes. We have also assessed the reactivity of mAbs towards human CG, and ovine, porcine, equine and bovine LH and FSH. The antigenic determinant recognized by ECG01 is localized on the alpha-subunit of equine gonadotropins and of human CG ...
Immunokinetics of equine herpesvirus 1 in donkey mares: suppression of secondary cell-mediated response.
Revue scientifique et technique (International Office of Epizootics)    September 1, 1992   Volume 11, Issue 3 901-908 doi: 10.20506/rst.11.3.636
Singh M, Charan S.To study the immunokinetics of equine herpesvirus 1 (EHV1), donkey mares were immunised with a laboratory strain of EHV1, or with recommended doses of Pneumabort-K vaccine (EHV1 Army 183 strain, formalin-inactivated, with an oil adjuvant) and a booster was given after three months. Humoral immune responses were studied by employing a virus neutralisation (VN) test. A leucocyte migration inhibition test (LMIT) was employed for the assay of cellular immune responses. The VN antibody titre reached 1:64 or 1:128 after primary immunisation and showed a marginal increase (1:256) after secondary immu...
A one-stage repair of third-degree perineal lacerations and rectovestibular fistulae in 17 mares.
Veterinary surgery : VS    September 1, 1992   Volume 21, Issue 5 378-381 doi: 10.1111/j.1532-950x.1992.tb01715.x
Belknap JK, Nickels FA.Third-degree perineal lacerations or rectovestibular fistulae in 17 mares were repaired surgically by a one-stage method. Primary healing occurred in 14 mares; there were one complete dehiscence and two partial dehiscences with fistula formation. Twelve of 13 mares that were bred became pregnant; nine carried foals to term and two are still pregnant. Two mares have each produced one unthrifty foal. One mare repeatedly aborts in the first trimester. Four mares have produced several healthy foals with no further problems. One mare suffered further perineal trauma while foaling.
Colopexy in broodmares: 44 cases (1986-1990).
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    September 1, 1992   Volume 201, Issue 5 782-787 
Hance SR, Embertson RM.Colopexies were performed in 44 broodmares requiring abdominal surgery for large colon volvulus or right dorsal displacement of the large colon. Colopexies were performed by suturing the lateral bands of the left and right ventral colon to the ventral abdominal wall. Forty-seven percent of the mares in which a colopexy was performed had previous surgery for a large colon volvulus or right dorsal displacement of the large colon. Postoperative complications considered directly associated with the colopexy procedure were intermittent abdominal pain in 7, reoperation in 5, subcutaneous fistulous t...
Changes in the hypothalamic-hypophyseal axis of mares in relation to the winter solstice.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    September 1, 1992   Volume 96, Issue 1 195-202 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.0960195
Silvia PJ, Johnson L, Fitzgerald BP.In mares, the amount of gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH) is low in the hypothalamus during seasonal anoestrus, but by early spring, concentrations of GnRH are high. The timing of this response was characterized more precisely by determining concentrations of GnRH in hypothalamic tissue collected immediately before and at various times after the winter solstice (22 December 1986). Ovaries, pituitary gland, hypothalamus and a blood sample were collected from six groups of mares (6-12 mares per group) at death, 1 week before day of the winter solstice and 1, 2, 3 and 12 weeks afterwards. No...
Readiness for birth; another piece of the puzzle.
Equine veterinary journal    September 1, 1992   Volume 24, Issue 5 336-337 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1992.tb02850.x
Holton DW, Silver M.No abstract available
Use of an ecraseur for ovariohysterectomy in mares.
Veterinary surgery : VS    September 1, 1992   Volume 21, Issue 5 374-377 doi: 10.1111/j.1532-950x.1992.tb01714.x
Hooper RN, Taylor TS, Behrens EA, Varner DD.Ovariohysterectomy was performed in 20 mares at three stages of estrus. An ecraseur was used to severe the ovarian branch of the ovarian artery and vein and the ovarian suspensory ligament en masse. All other vessels supplying the ovaries and uterus were doubly ligated and transected. All mares survived. Complications were intraoperative hemorrhage in three mares, postoperative vaginal bleeding in two mares, and a hematoma in the remnant of the broad ligament in one mare. No adhesions between the uterine stump or remnants of the broad ligament and abdominal structures were detected by palpatio...