Effect of insemination volume on uterine contractions and inflammatory response and on elimination of semen in the mare uterus-scintigraphic and ultrasonographic studies.
Abstract: The effect of artificial insemination (AI) volume on uterine contractility and inflammation and on elimination of semen in the reproductive tract of mares was examined for 4 h after AI using two methods, scintigraphy and ultrasonography. The same doses were used in both methods: 2 and 100 ml of skim milk-extended frozen semen. In the scintigraphic study, the number of reproductively normal mares was four per group and in the ultrasonographic study five per group. For scintigraphy, the semen was radiolabelled with technetium-99m. The static scintigrams were acquired immediately before and 30, 60, 120, 180 and 240 min after AI. The activities in the vagina and uterus were calculated and the values for sperm that had been discharged from the mare were obtained by subtracting the counts for the uterus and vagina from the total radioactivity. The dynamic scintigrams were taken continuously for the first 30 min after AI and in 5-min periods immediately after having acquired the static scintigrams. The uterine contractions were counted. In the ultrasonographic study, the mares were scanned before AI and at 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 60, 120, 150, 180, and 240 min after AI, for at least 1 min each time. The examinations were videotaped and contractions counted per minute. More contractions were observed with the ultrasonographic method than with the scintigraphic method. No difference was present in the number of contractions between the groups, except in the ultrasonographic study at 4 h, when the mares inseminated with 100 ml showed more contractions than did the mares inseminated with 2 ml. The intraluminal fluid was sampled with a tampon and by uterine lavage 4 h after AI in the ultrasonographic study. The numbers of polymorphonuclear leukocytes and spermatozoa were counted, but the differences between the groups were not significant. Under our experimental conditions and with the number of mares examined, the volume of the AI dose had an insignificant effect on contractility - with the exception at 4 h - and inflammatory reaction and on semen elimination in the uterus.
Publication Date: 2005-11-05 PubMed ID: 16268958DOI: 10.1111/j.1439-0442.2005.00757.xGoogle Scholar: Lookup
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- Journal Article
Summary
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The study investigates the influence of the volume of artificial insemination on uterine contractions, inflammation, and semen elimination in mares using scintigraphy and ultrasonography over a four-hour period after insemination. The findings indicate no significant difference attributed to the volume of insemination.
Research Methodology
The research was conducted using two key methods, scintigraphy and ultrasonography.
- In the scintigraphic study, semen was radiolabelled with technetium-99m, enabling the tracking of semen movement within the reproductive tract. This was performed on four healthy, reproductive mares per group
- The static scintigrams were taken before and at fixed intervals after AI, tracking the activities in the vagina and uterus. Additionally, semen expelled by the mare was calculated using these readings
- The dynamic scintigrams were taken following the static scintigrams and for the first 30 minutes after AI. The count of uterine contractions was measured through these recordings
- In the ultrasonographic study, the reproductive tract was scanned before and at regular intervals after AI to monitor uterine contractions. This was conducted on five mares per group
Findings of the Study
- The ultrasonographic method revealed more contractions than the scintigraphic method
- No significant difference was observed in the number of contractions between the groups, with the exception of the study at 4 hours post-AI when mares inseminated with 100 ml showed more contractions than the mares inseminated with 2 ml
- The intraluminal fluid was sampled 4 hours after AI to count the number of polymorphonuclear leukocytes and spermatozoa. Still, no noticeable variation was found between the groupings in this study
- In conclusion, the volume of the AI dose was found to have an insignificant effect on uterine contractility (except for at the 4-hour mark), inflammation, and semen elimination in the uterus, under the experimental conditions
Cite This Article
APA
Sinnemaa L, Järvimaa T, Lehmonen N, Mäkelä O, Reilas T, Sankari S, Katila T.
(2005).
Effect of insemination volume on uterine contractions and inflammatory response and on elimination of semen in the mare uterus-scintigraphic and ultrasonographic studies.
J Vet Med A Physiol Pathol Clin Med, 52(9), 466-471.
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1439-0442.2005.00757.x Publication
Researcher Affiliations
- Department of Clinical Veterinary Sciences, University of Helsinki, PL 57, 00014 Helsingin Ylopisto, Finland.
MeSH Terms
- Animals
- Female
- Horse Diseases / etiology
- Horses / physiology
- Inflammation / etiology
- Inflammation / veterinary
- Insemination, Artificial / adverse effects
- Insemination, Artificial / methods
- Insemination, Artificial / veterinary
- Radionuclide Imaging
- Semen / physiology
- Time Factors
- Ultrasonography
- Uterine Contraction / physiology
- Uterus / diagnostic imaging
Citations
This article has been cited 1 times.- Katila T, Ferreira-Dias G. Evolution of the Concepts of Endometrosis, Post Breeding Endometritis, and Susceptibility of Mares. Animals (Basel) 2022 Mar 19;12(6).
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