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A dominant follicle does not affect follicular recruitment by superovulatory doses of FSH in cattle but can inhibit ovulation
Authors:Stock A E  Ellington J E  Fortune J E
Institution:Department of Physiology, College of Veterinary Medicine, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA.
Abstract:It has been suggested that superovulation in cattle is impaired if FSH injections are initiated in the presence of a dominant follicle, but the results of experiments to test this hypothesis have been contradictory. However, previous experiments were conducted during mid-cycle, when the absence or presence of a dominant follicle is difficult to assess. We took a different approach by comparing the effects of initiating superovulatory injections of FSH (11 equal doses of FSH-P, every 12 h) on Day 1 of the bovine estrous cycle, when a dominant follicle clearly is not present, vs initiation on Day 6, when a dominant follicle clearly is present and actively growing (n = 17 heifers in a "crossover" design). In 8 17 heifers initiation of FSH injections in the presence of a dominant follicle (Day 6 group) caused ovulation of the dominant follicle within 1 to 2 days and formation of a smaller than normal CL. These animals had higher than normal concentrations of plasma progesterone around the time of expected estrus (P < 0.05) and failed to exhibit estrus. Although the mean number and diameter of the follicles recruited in response to FSH injections in heifers that ovulated the dominant follicle prematurely were not different from the other heifers in the Day 6 group, no ovulations were observed, and no embryos or ova were recovered 6 d after insemination. Conversely, when FSH injections were initiated on Day 1 in these 8 heifers, they exhibited estrus, and their plasma progesterone around the time of estrus, mean ovulation rate, and number of total and transferable embryos recovered did not differ from the responses observed in the remaining 9 heifers treated either on Day 1 or on Day 6. Taken together, these results indicate that a dominant follicle does not affect the ability of smaller follicles to be recruited in response to exogenous FSH, but may impair their ovulation. These findings provide an explanation for previous reports of decreased superovulatory responses during times of the cycle when a dominant follicle would be expected to be present.
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