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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.
Horse blood groups and hemolytic disease of the newborn foal.
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences    May 3, 1962   Volume 97 235-250 doi: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.1962.tb34639.x
FRANKS D.No abstract available
[Hemagglutination with the virus of mare abortion]. SEMERDJIEV B.No abstract available
Anticoagulant activity of equine follicular fluid.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    April 1, 1962   Volume 3 269-282 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.0030269
STANGROOM JE, de WEEVERS RG.No abstract available
Steroids in the follicular fluid and the corpus luteum of the mare. A ‘two-cell type’ theory of ovarian steroid synthesis.
The Journal of endocrinology    March 1, 1962   Volume 24 59-63 doi: 10.1677/joe.0.0240059
SHORT RV.A comparison has been made between the steroids present in equine follicular fluid and luteal tissue. Follicular fluid was found to contain progesterone, 17α-hydroxyprogesterone, androstenedione, epitestosterone, 19-norandrostenedione, oestrone, oestradiol-17β and 6α-hydroxyoestradiol-17β, in confirmation of previous studies. On the other hand, luteal tissue contained large amounts of progesterone and 20α-hydroxypregn-4-en-3-one, and a small quantity of 17α-hydroxyprogesterone. No C18 or C19 steroids could be detected. These findings are therefore interpreted as evidence in favour of ...
Changes of somatic chromosomes of the horse in serial in vitro transfers.
Cytogenetics    January 1, 1962   Volume 1 291-300 doi: 10.1159/000129737
SASAKI MS, SASAKI M.In two tissue culture lines, HS and HF, which originated from foetal horse tissues, the changes of chromosomes were studied in the course of serial in vitro transfers. It was found that the two cell lines under consideration were characterized by specific changes in chromosome pattern different from each other. HS underwent transformation from diploidy to hyperdiploidy. HF may have been in a process of transformation from diploidy to tetraploidy. Evidence derived from this study indicates that several courses for chromosome transformation exist, and that generalizations predicting a single pat...
Diabetes mellitus with pituitary neoplasms in a horse and a dog.
The Cornell veterinarian    January 1, 1962   Volume 52 133-145 
KING JM, KAVANAUGH JF, BENTINCK-SMITH J.No abstract available
Sexual capacity of eunuchs. Stimulation of sexual activity in geldings.
Western medicine; the medical journal of the west    January 1, 1962   Volume 3 11-13 
DAMRAU F, ISACHSEN NO, LOMBARD FA.No abstract available
[On information on the placenta of the order Perissodactyla].
Acta anatomica    January 1, 1962   Volume 49 154-167 
LUDWIG KS.No abstract available
delta5 3beta-Hydroxy steroids in the follicular fluid of the mare.
The Journal of endocrinology    December 1, 1961   Volume 23 277-283 doi: 10.1677/joe.0.0230277
SHORT RV.No abstract available
Androgens and related compounds in the spermatic vein blood of domestic animals. IV. Testicular androgens in the ram, boar and stallion.
The Journal of endocrinology    October 1, 1961   Volume 23 171-178 doi: 10.1677/joe.0.0230171
LINDNER HR.No abstract available
Pregnancy diagnosis in the mare.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    September 1, 1961   Volume 139 543-547 
ZEMJANIS R.No abstract available
Ovarian oestrogen levels in the non-pregnant mare: relationship to histological appearance of the uterus and to clinical status.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    May 1, 1961   Volume 2 130-137 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.0020130
KNUDSEN O, VELLE W.No abstract available
Electron microscopy of equine abortion virus.
American journal of veterinary research    March 1, 1961   Volume 22 250-265 
TAJIMA M, SHIMIZU T, ISHIZAKI R.No abstract available
The estrogens of the pregnant mare.
Endocrinology    March 1, 1961   Volume 68 411-416 doi: 10.1210/endo-68-3-411
SAVARD K.The urinary ketonic estrogens were studied at monthly intervals in five pregnant mares. Estrone and equilin appear to be the principal components and equilenin a minor constituent of the mares’ estrogens. The levels of equilin rise from the 4–5th months to equal and in some instances exceed those of estrone in the late months of pregnancy. A partition chromatographic method for the separation of the ketonic phenolic steroids of pregnant mares’ urine is described.
[On the content of antibodies in the blood of colts and in the milk of horses used in the production of anti-encephalitis serum].
Voprosy virusologii    March 1, 1961   Volume 6 149-151 
TRUKHMANOV BG, RODIUKOVA EN.No abstract available
Content of antibodies in the blood of foals and the milk of mares used for producing encephalitis antiserum.
Problems of virology    January 1, 1961   Volume 6 162-164 
TRUKHMANOV BG, RODYUKOVA EN.No abstract available
Urinary oestrogens in the stallion. Qualitative and quantitative investigations.
Acta endocrinologica    January 1, 1961   Volume 36 131-140 doi: 10.1530/acta.0.0360131
PIGON H, LUNAAS T, VELLE W.No abstract available
[Sugar in sperm plasma of the bull, ram and stallion].
Ukrains'kyi biokhimichnyi zhurnal    January 1, 1961   Volume 33 168-174 
ZHIVKOV VI.No abstract available
A simple short assay of pregnant mares’ serum gonadotrophin.
Acta endocrinologica    January 1, 1961   Volume 36 65-72 doi: 10.1530/acta.0.0360065
SANTAMARINA E, JOVEN LL.No abstract available
Factors influencing accuracy of a gonadotrophin test for pregnancy in mares.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    November 1, 1960   Volume 137 522-524 
SANTAMARINA E, JOVEN LL.No abstract available
A new technic for the demonstration of the fetal electrocardiogram in the large domestic animal (cattle, sheep, horse).
The Cornell veterinarian    October 1, 1960   Volume 50 459-468 
LARKS SD, HOLM LW, PARKER HR.No abstract available
[Urinary estrogens in stallions].
Acta physiologica Polonica    September 1, 1960   Volume 11 861-863 
PIGON H, LUNAAS T, VELLE W.No abstract available
A case report: arrested testicular development in the horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    August 15, 1960   Volume 137 255-257 
FRANDSON RD, EPLING GP, DAVIS RW.No abstract available
Metabolism of estrogens in the pregnant mare.
Endocrinology    August 1, 1960   Volume 67 276-279 doi: 10.1210/endo-67-2-276
SAVARD K, THOMPSON HG, GUT M, DORFMAN RI.The biosynthetic origins of the ring-B unsaturated estrogens, equilin and cquilcnin have been the subject of considerable speculation. Girard and associates (1,2) first iso- lated these compounds, in addition to estrone, from the urine of pregnant marcs, and observed that their proportions increased during the latter months of pregnancy, at a time when the total estrogen (estrone) content of the urine diminished (2,3). Heard and associates (4) reported that estrone-C14 administered to a pregnant marc was not trans- formed to equilin nor equilenin (5). We have explored in the mare the pos...
The effect of time and temperature on the gonadotrophic potency of pregnant mare serum.
American journal of veterinary research    July 1, 1960   Volume 21 585-590 
SANTAMARINA E, JOVEN LL.No abstract available
The inactivation of pregnant mares’ serum gonadotrophin by hydroquinones and quinones.
Endocrinology    May 1, 1960   Volume 66 647-657 doi: 10.1210/endo-66-5-647
GRAHAM RC, BEER CT, NOBLE RL.Pregnant mares' serum (PMS) when incubated in vitro with hydroquinones and quinones loses its gonadotrophic activity. The influence of the incubation conditions on this process has been examined. Hydroquinones did not inactivate PMS unless they were first allowed to oxidize to the corresponding quinones. Þ-Benzoquinone was found to be more active than mono-substituted quinones and the di- and tetra-substituted quinones had little or no activity. The amorphous polymer “humic acid” formed by “ageing” p-benzoquinone solutions partially inactivated PMS but itwas much less active than the ...
Steroids present in the follicular fluid of the mare.
The Journal of endocrinology    April 1, 1960   Volume 20 147-156 doi: 10.1677/joe.0.0200147
SHORT RV.No abstract available
Biosynthesis of steroids in stallion testis tissue.
Endocrinology    April 1, 1960   Volume 66 617-624 doi: 10.1210/endo-66-4-617
SAVARD K, GOLDZIEHER JW.No abstract available
Progesterone in blood. IV. Progesterone in the blood of mares.
The Journal of endocrinology    December 1, 1959   Volume 19 207-210 doi: 10.1677/joe.0.0190207
SHORT RV.Progesterone levels have been measured in the peripheral blood of pregnant and non-pregnant mares, and in umbilical cord blood collected during foaling. It was found that progesterone was readily detectable in the blood of pregnant and non-pregnant animals provided that there was a fully developed corpus luteum present in the ovaries. During the second half of gestation, when the ovaries have become fibrotic, progesterone was no longer detectable in the peripheral blood, even though it was present in high concentrations in umbilical cord blood. The reasons for this apparent disappearance...
Histopathological study of aborted fetuses naturally infected with equine abortion virus with some epidemiological findings.
The Japanese journal of experimental medicine    December 1, 1959   Volume 29 635-641 
KAWAKAMI Y, KAJI T, SUGIMURA K, ISHITANI R, SHIMIZU T, MATUMOTO M.No abstract available