Early pregnancy diagnosis and embryo/fetus mortality in cattle

Pregnancy diagnosis by transrectal ultrasonography (using a 5 MHZ linear probe) presented the maximum sensitivity and negative predictive values at day 26 and day 29 after estrus in heifers and cows, respectively. Palpation per rectum using the fetal membrane slip for pregnancy diagnosis did not inc...

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Main Author: Romano, Juan Eduardo
Other Authors: Forrest, David
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Texas A&M University 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/3125
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spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-31252013-01-08T10:38:03ZEarly pregnancy diagnosis and embryo/fetus mortality in cattleRomano, Juan EduardoCattlepregnancyultrasoundpalpation per rectumembryo/fetus mortalityPregnancy diagnosis by transrectal ultrasonography (using a 5 MHZ linear probe) presented the maximum sensitivity and negative predictive values at day 26 and day 29 after estrus in heifers and cows, respectively. Palpation per rectum using the fetal membrane slip for pregnancy diagnosis did not increase embryo/fetus mortality when compared with a positive control group of non-palpated females. The use of a controlled randomized block design was a useful approach to study this problem. Blocking for category and number of embryos allowed us to remove these confounding factors. Factors that affected pregnancy loss during the first four months of pregnancy were: period of pregnancy, age of the animal, number of previous lactations and number of embryos. Pregnancy loss was higher during the embryonic than fetal periods. Spontaneous embryo/fetal mortality increased with the age of the animal and lactation number. The risk of spontaneous embryo/fetus mortality was higher in twin than in single pregnancies. Two types of embryo/fetus mortality were noted: Type I and Type II. Type I was characterized by presence of positive fetal membrane slip by palpation per rectum, signs of degeneration by transrectal ultrasonography and persistence of a functional corpus luteum. The uterus took approximately 3 weeks to be noted clean by transrectal ultrasonography and the animals showed estrus one month after the conceptus was diagnosed dead. Type II was characterized by absence of positive signs of pregnancy by palpation per rectum, absence of signs of degeneration by transrectal ultrasonography and absence of a functional corpus luteum. Pregnancy loss in nuclear transfer derived embryos was higher compared to in vivo derived embryos produced by artificial insemination. Pregnancy loss occurred mainly during the transition from the embryonic to the fetal period. Embryo/fetus mortality detected was Type I. Progesterone produced by the corpus luteum was noted at pregnancy levels for approximately two weeks after embryo/fetus death. Protein B, a hormonal placental marker, was maintained at pregnancy levels for approximately 3 weeks after embryo/fetus death. No differences in the levels of the two hormones were noted when comparing females with dead or live conceptuses.Texas A&M UniversityForrest, DavidKraemer, Duane C.2006-04-12T16:02:56Z2006-04-12T16:02:56Z2004-122006-04-12T16:02:56ZBookThesisElectronic Dissertationtext740742 byteselectronicapplication/pdfborn digitalhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/3125en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Cattle
pregnancy
ultrasound
palpation per rectum
embryo/fetus mortality
spellingShingle Cattle
pregnancy
ultrasound
palpation per rectum
embryo/fetus mortality
Romano, Juan Eduardo
Early pregnancy diagnosis and embryo/fetus mortality in cattle
description Pregnancy diagnosis by transrectal ultrasonography (using a 5 MHZ linear probe) presented the maximum sensitivity and negative predictive values at day 26 and day 29 after estrus in heifers and cows, respectively. Palpation per rectum using the fetal membrane slip for pregnancy diagnosis did not increase embryo/fetus mortality when compared with a positive control group of non-palpated females. The use of a controlled randomized block design was a useful approach to study this problem. Blocking for category and number of embryos allowed us to remove these confounding factors. Factors that affected pregnancy loss during the first four months of pregnancy were: period of pregnancy, age of the animal, number of previous lactations and number of embryos. Pregnancy loss was higher during the embryonic than fetal periods. Spontaneous embryo/fetal mortality increased with the age of the animal and lactation number. The risk of spontaneous embryo/fetus mortality was higher in twin than in single pregnancies. Two types of embryo/fetus mortality were noted: Type I and Type II. Type I was characterized by presence of positive fetal membrane slip by palpation per rectum, signs of degeneration by transrectal ultrasonography and persistence of a functional corpus luteum. The uterus took approximately 3 weeks to be noted clean by transrectal ultrasonography and the animals showed estrus one month after the conceptus was diagnosed dead. Type II was characterized by absence of positive signs of pregnancy by palpation per rectum, absence of signs of degeneration by transrectal ultrasonography and absence of a functional corpus luteum. Pregnancy loss in nuclear transfer derived embryos was higher compared to in vivo derived embryos produced by artificial insemination. Pregnancy loss occurred mainly during the transition from the embryonic to the fetal period. Embryo/fetus mortality detected was Type I. Progesterone produced by the corpus luteum was noted at pregnancy levels for approximately two weeks after embryo/fetus death. Protein B, a hormonal placental marker, was maintained at pregnancy levels for approximately 3 weeks after embryo/fetus death. No differences in the levels of the two hormones were noted when comparing females with dead or live conceptuses.
author2 Forrest, David
author_facet Forrest, David
Romano, Juan Eduardo
author Romano, Juan Eduardo
author_sort Romano, Juan Eduardo
title Early pregnancy diagnosis and embryo/fetus mortality in cattle
title_short Early pregnancy diagnosis and embryo/fetus mortality in cattle
title_full Early pregnancy diagnosis and embryo/fetus mortality in cattle
title_fullStr Early pregnancy diagnosis and embryo/fetus mortality in cattle
title_full_unstemmed Early pregnancy diagnosis and embryo/fetus mortality in cattle
title_sort early pregnancy diagnosis and embryo/fetus mortality in cattle
publisher Texas A&M University
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/3125
work_keys_str_mv AT romanojuaneduardo earlypregnancydiagnosisandembryofetusmortalityincattle
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