Low dose insemination of mares using non-sorted and sex-sorted sperm.
- Journal Article
- Review
Summary
The research article presents the study of low dose insemination techniques on mares using sex-sorted and non-sorted sperm. The inception of such techniques can potentially enhance breeding capabilities, cater for poor semen quality, and potentially reduce endometritis after breeding. The study discusses three methods: surgical oviductal insemination, deep uterine insemination, and hysteroscopic insemination, and evaluates their effectiveness. Additionally, the research explores the effect of such methods while using sex-sorted sperm, and the challenges it poses.
Low Dose Insemination Techniques
- Surgical oviductal insemination: This method, which inserts sperms directly into the oviduct, resulted in a 21% pregnancy rate when 50,000 sperms were used.
- Deep uterine insemination: Two different methods were used, each involving the insertion of a flexible catheter into the uterus. Pregnancy rate varied from 35-53% depending on the number of spermatozoa used (5 million – 25 million).
- Hysteroscopic insemination: In this technique, fewer sperms are inserted into or around the uterotubal junction. Variations of this technique produced different pregnancy rates depending on the number of spermatozoa, ranging from 29 to 75%.
Low Dose Insemination with Sex-sorted Spermatozoa
This section investigates the effects and challenges presented when employing sex-sorted sperm for insemination. The separation of spermatozoa into X- or Y-chromosome-bearing sperm can be done through flow cytometry but the process is time-consuming. As such, low dose insemination is necessary for sex-sorted sperm.
Insemination Comparisons: Sorted vs Non-sorted Sperm
A number of studies were undertaken to compare the pregnancy rates when mares were inseminated with sorted or non-sorted sperm, as well as between fresh and frozen sperm. Hysteroscopic insemination technique was found to yield more pregnancies compared to ultrasound-guided deep uterine insemination. The pregnancy rates were similar regardless of the sperm being sorted or not. There was, however, a notable decrease in successful pregnancies when using frozen sex-sorted sperm compared to fresh sex-sorted and non-sorted sperm.
Conclusions and Future Research
The results show that hysteroscopic insemination is viable for achieving pregnancies with low numbers of both fresh and frozen-thawed spermatozoa. However, the application of these techniques on stallions with poor semen quality remains uncertain and needs further investigation. Moreover, future studies should focus on developing freezing techniques for sex-sorted spermatozoa.
Cite This Article
Publication
Researcher Affiliations
- Animal Reproduction and Biotechnology Laboratory, ARBL Building, Foothills Campus, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523, USA.
MeSH Terms
- Animals
- Cryopreservation / veterinary
- Female
- Flow Cytometry / veterinary
- Horses / physiology
- Insemination, Artificial / methods
- Insemination, Artificial / veterinary
- Male
- Pregnancy
- Semen Preservation / veterinary
- Sex Chromosomes
- Sex Preselection / veterinary
- Spermatozoa / physiology