Characteristics of frozen epididymal spermatozoa from stallions that died 12 to 36 hours after colic surgery.
Abstract: Equine spermatozoa from the cauda epididymis were previously collected and frozen, and the fertility was assessed. Most studies were performed on healthy stallions that had undergone routine castration or on the epididymis collected at the abattoir, but there are no studies on the quality of epididymal semen in subjects which have died from colic or which underwent intensive care. The present study was designed to verify whether a severe illness could affect epididymal semen quality and freezability in the stallion. Therefore, epididymal semen characteristics during the freezing process in stallions which had died from colic and in healthy stallions submitted to elective castration were compared. Five stallions that had died from colic (ill stallions [ISs]) and seven stallions that had undergone elective castration (healthy stallions) were castrated, and cauda epididymis spermatozoa were collected and processed. Sperm quality was tested after collection, after washing procedures, at the end of the equilibration (5 °C for 75 minutes), and after freezing/thawing. Sperm quality was measured by objective motility characteristics, membrane and acrosome integrity, and mitochondrial activity. After collection, sperm in ISs showed low kinetic parameters (total motility: 17.3 ± 3%, progressive motility: 6 ± 1%, average path velocity: 57.4 ± 35.4 μm/s, straightness: 74.2%) compared with healthy stallions (total motility: 90.8 ± 3.7%, progressive motility: 70 ± 4%, average path velocity: 118.1 ± 12.6 μm/s, straightness: 82.4%) but demonstrated similar membrane and acrosome integrity (85 ± 2.8% vs. 87.6 ± 3.1%). Sperm kinetic parameters increased after washing procedures and cooling in ISs, reaching comparable values after equilibration (5 °C for 75 minutes) and freezing/thawing. The data reported in this study suggest that the quality of the equine epididymal spermatozoa cryopreserved in stallions that had died from colic was similar to that reported in epididymal sperm after elective castration and was also similar to the data reported in literature for cryopreserved equine semen.
Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Publication Date: 2015-09-11 PubMed ID: 26443233DOI: 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2015.09.006Google Scholar: Lookup
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- Journal Article
Summary
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The research paper investigates whether severe illness, such as colic, affects the quality of stallion sperm collected from the epididymis and its ability to withstand freezing. Researchers compared sperm from stallions that had died from colic with those from healthy stallions that had undergone elective castration.
Methodology
- Five stallions that died due to colic (referred to as ill stallions) and seven healthy stallions that had undergone castration were chosen for this study.
- The sperm from the cauda epididymis, a part of the male reproductive system, was collected and processed from these stallions.
- The researchers assessed the quality of collected sperm at various stages: after collection, after cleaning procedures, after equilibrating at 5 degrees Celsius for 75 minutes, and after freezing/thawing.
- The quality check included measuring motility characteristics, membrane and acrosomal integrity, and mitochondrial activity of the sperm.
Findings
- Initial quality checks revealed that the sperm from ill stallions had lower kinetic parameters including total motility, progressive motility, average path velocity, and straightness compared to the sperm from the healthy stallions. However, the membrane and acrosome integrity was similar for both groups.
- Interestingly, sperm kinetic parameters from ill stallions improved after washing and cooling procedures, reaching values comparable to those from healthy stallions after equilibration and freezing/thawing.
Implications
- The results suggest that the quality of cryopreserved epididymal sperm from stallions that died from colic is similar to that from healthy stallions undergoing elective castration.
- This indicates that severe illness may not affect the quality and freezability of equine epididymal sperm which is a significant finding for the equine breeding industry.
Cite This Article
APA
Gloria A, Carluccio A, Petrizzi L, Noto F, Contri A.
(2015).
Characteristics of frozen epididymal spermatozoa from stallions that died 12 to 36 hours after colic surgery.
Theriogenology, 85(2), 345-350.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.theriogenology.2015.09.006 Publication
Researcher Affiliations
- Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Teramo, Teramo, Italy. Electronic address: gloriaalessia@libero.it.
- Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Teramo, Teramo, Italy.
- Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Teramo, Teramo, Italy.
- Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Teramo, Teramo, Italy.
- Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Teramo, Teramo, Italy.
MeSH Terms
- Acrosome / physiology
- Animals
- Cell Membrane / physiology
- Colic / mortality
- Colic / physiopathology
- Colic / veterinary
- Cryopreservation / veterinary
- Epididymis / cytology
- Horse Diseases / physiopathology
- Horses
- Male
- Mitochondria / physiology
- Orchiectomy / veterinary
- Semen Analysis / methods
- Semen Analysis / veterinary
- Semen Preservation / methods
- Semen Preservation / veterinary
- Sperm Motility
- Spermatozoa / physiology
- Spermatozoa / ultrastructure
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