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1.
Serum LH levels were determined by radioimmunoassay at the normal time of the proestrous LH peak (17.30 – 18.00) and ovulatory performance was examined on the morning of estrus in rats treated with indomethacin, an inhibitor of prostaglandin synthesis. When the drug was administered at 14.30 on the day of proestrus, only 21% of the rats ovulated and the total number of ova shed was reduced to 4% of that found in the untreated control group, but there was no significant change in peak serum LH level (1122 ± 184 vs. 975 ± 240 ng/ml ± S.E., treated vs. control). Prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) given late on the day of proestrus (25 to 750 μ g/rat at 24.00) was effective in overcoming this antiovulatory action of indomethacin: 71–90% of the rats ovulated, though the number of eggs shed was low (24–55% of control value). Indomethacin was still effective in blocking ovulation when given at 20.00, that is after completion of the proestrous LH surge, but not at 24.00. Administration of PGE2 (2 × 750 μ g/rat) in the early afternoon of proestrus elicited a rise in serum LH levels in rats in which the cyclic LH surge had been blocked with Nembutal (470 ± 87 vs. 106 ± 17 ng/ml ± S.E.) and induced ovulation in two-thirds of these animals.The results confirm, by direct measurement, that indomethacin does not block LH release but interferes with a late phase of the ovulatory process. PGE2 reverses this action of indomethacin on the ovary. In addition, PGE2 has a central effect causing LH release.  相似文献   

2.
The objective of this study was to examine the effect of a chronic stressor, lameness, on reproductive parameters. Seventy cows 30-80 days post-partum were scored for lameness and follicular phases synchronized with GnRH followed seven days later by prostaglandin (PG). Fifteen Lame animals did not respond to GnRH ovarian stimulation. Milk progesterone for 5 days prior to PG was lower in the remaining Lame cows than Healthy herdmates. Fewer Lame cows ovulated (26/37 versus 17/18; P = 0.04) and the interval from PG to ovulation was shorter in Lame cows. In Subset 1 (20 animals), the LH pulse frequency was similar in ovulating animals (Lame and Healthy) but lower in Lame non-ovulators. An LH surge always preceded ovulation but lameness did not affect the interval from PG to LH surge onset or LH surge concentrations. Before the LH surge, estradiol was lower in non-ovulating cows compared to those that ovulated and estradiol concentrations were positively correlated with LH pulse frequency. In Subset 2 (45 cows), Lame ovulating cows had a less intense estrus than Healthy cows, although Lame cows began estrus and stood-to-be-mounted earlier than Healthy cows. In conclusion, we have identified several parameters to explain poor fertility in some chronically stressed animals. From 30 to 80 days post-partum, there was a graded effect that ranged from 29% Lame cows with absence of ovarian activity, whereas another 21% Lame cows failed to express estrus or ovulate a low estrogenic follicle; in 50% cows, many reproductive parameters were unaffected by lameness.  相似文献   

3.
In this paper we present evidence that a single low dose of the natural synthetic gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH), inhibits ovulation induced by LH in proestrous-hypophysectomized rats. Rats hypophysectomized by the parapharyngeal route in the morning of proestrus received an intravenous injection of 100 or 300 ng GnRH at 1400 h immediately followed by 1.0 microgram LH per 100 g bw. In control groups, either one or both hormones were replaced with 0.9% NaCl. Ovulation was assessed the following morning by counting the ova present in oviductal flushings. All the rats treated with LH alone ovulated, and the addition of GnRH reduced significantly the number of ovulating rats and the number of ova per ovulating rat. In other groups of rats hypophysectomized in the morning of proestrus and treated in the same way, ovarian or adrenal secretory rates of estradiol and/or progesterone were measured after cannulation of the corresponding vein, in the afternoon of proestrus. In these animals, GnRH failed to inhibit either the ovarian progesterone surge observed 2 h after LH administration, or the adrenal progesterone secretion. All hypophysectomized rats showed lower ovarian secretory rate of estradiol than intact rats; this rate was not affected by treatment with LH or LH plus GnRH. The systemic estradiol levels in plasma of hypophysectomized rats were distributed within a range of 20 pg/ml to 50 pg/ml. The number of rats whose levels were above 21 pg/ml on estrus day was significantly higher in rats receiving 300 ng GnRH as compared to those receiving 100 ng GnRH, reaching values that surpassed the concentration found in intact, untreated animals at the same time of estrus. This effect did not depend on LH administration.  相似文献   

4.
The present study was designed to examine mechanism(s) of the anti-ovulatory action of the anti-androgen, hydroxyflutamide (OH-F). Prepubertal rats were treated with 4 IU pregnant mare's serum gonadotropin (PMSG) (day -2) to induce first estrus and ovulation. They received OH-F in sesame oil or oil alone at 08:00 and 20:00 h on day 0 (the day of proestrus) and ovulations were assessed on the morning of day 1. Eighty-three percent of control animals ovulated with a mean of 7.7 +/- 1.1 corpora lutea per rat. Hydroxyflutamide blocked ovulation in all but 2 of the 12 rats receiving this drug alone. All of OH-F treated rats that received 5 and 25 IU human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) ovulated with means +/- SEM of 9.1 +/- 0.1 and 7.3 +/- 1.4 corpora lutea per rat, respectively. The dose of 0.2 IU hCG was essentially ineffective, while the effect of 1.0 IU hCG was intermediate. At the dose of 20 ng and above (100 and 500 ng) luteining hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) completely overcame the ovulation blockade in the OH-F treated animals, while a 4-ng dose was ineffective. At 18:00 h on the day of proestrus, serum LH levels in control animals were 17.56 +/- 2.60 ng/mL, which were 920% above basal levels (1.90 +/- 0.13) indicating a spontaneous LH surge. This surge was suppressed in OH-F treated rats. Injection of LHRH, at the dose of 20 ng and above, reinstated the LH release in OH-F treated animals. Thus, the anti-androgen, OH-F, inhibits ovulation in PMSG-treated immature rats through its interference with the preovulatory LH surge; the inhibition can be reversed by hCG or LHRH. Hydroxyflutamide does not appear to interfere at the level of the pituitary, but may have direct action at the hypothalamic and (or) extrahypothalamic sites involved in the generation of positive feedback signals that control LH release.  相似文献   

5.
We previously proposed that an endothelin-angiotensin-atrial natriuretic peptide system may contribute to inducing ovulation of mature bovine follicles by modulating follicular secretion of steroids and prostaglandins (PGs). Thus, this study aimed to determine the real-time changes in the local release of angiotensin II (Ang II), endothelin (ET), atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP), PGF(2alpha), and steroid hormones from bovine mature follicles during the periovulatory period in vivo. Seven cows were treated for superovulation using FSH and PGF(2alpha) injections. Two dialysis capillary membranes per follicle were surgically implanted into the theca layer of mature follicles and connected to a microdialysis system (MDS). Fractions of the perfusate were collected from Day -1 (Day 0 = LH surge) to Day 3. Five out of seven treated cows were normally ovulated, and the newly formed corpora lutea were observed at the end of the experiment. In these five ovulated cows, the release of estradiol, androstenedione, and progesterone in the theca layer increased (P < 0.05) synchronously with the LH surge. Acute increases in PGF(2alpha) and Ang II concentrations in the ovarian venous plasma (OVP) were observed at 24-48 h after the peak of the LH surge, when multiple ovulations were expected to occur. The follicular Ang II release was low during the pre-LH surge period and rose (P < 0.05) at the beginning of the increase in the LH surge. On the other hand, ET-1 release dropped (P < 0.05) when plasma LH started to increase. However, no clear changes in ANP concentration in the MDS perfusate and plasma were observed. The above local changes in Ang II, PGF(2alpha), as well as steroid hormones were not observed in cows (n = 2) that did not show an LH surge and ovulation. The present results demonstrate for the first time the local release of Ang II, ET-1, and ANP from the bovine mature follicle in real-time in vivo and show that Ang II and PGF(2alpha) concentrations in the OVP acutely increase around the time of ovulation. The overall results support the concept of a local functional ET-Ang-ANP system in the bovine mature follicle that may be involved in the ovulatory process.  相似文献   

6.
These studies describe induction of a delayed anovulatory syndrome (DAS) by estradiol (E2) in female C57BL/6J mice. Six days after birth, female mice were injected s.c. with 0.1 micrograms estradiol benzoate or oil. Over 90% of the oil-injected controls exhibited estrous cycles from 2 to 9 mo of age. In contrast, 60% of the E2-injected mice exhibited estrous cycles at 2 mo of age but were acyclic by 9 mo; these mice were considered to have exhibited a DAS, and had longer cycles than controls. At 12 mo, ovarian impairments were assessed by examining 1) ovulation after s.c. injection of 5 IU human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG), and 2) estrous cycles after grafting into young (3-mo-old) hosts. Simultaneously, neuroendocrine impairments were assessed by examining 1) the surge of luteinizing hormone (LH) induced by E2 implants after ovariectomy, and 2) estrous cycles after receiving ovarian grafts from 3-mo-old mice. Ovaries from DAS and control mice ovulated equally in response to hCG. Ovaries from DAS mice grafted into young ovariectomized hosts supported 30% more cycles, of shorter period, compared with ovaries from control donors. However, the E2-induced LH surge was 50% smaller in DAS mice than in controls. Ovariectomized DAS hosts with ovarian grafts from young mice supported 70% fewer estrous cycles, of longer period, compared with ovariectomized control hosts with young grafts. We conclude that the E2-induced DAS in female mice is not due to ovarian impairments, but seems to result from neuroendocrine impairments.  相似文献   

7.
Two experiments were performed on seasonally anovular Merino ewes to determine the intervals between time of introduction of rams, the preovulatory surge of LH and the first ovulation. Ovulation was determined by laparoscopy and LH was measured by solid phase radioimmunoassay. In Experiment 1 the interval between the introduction of rams and the beginning of the LH surge was 27 ± 4 h (mean ± S.E., range 6–52 h), and in Experiment 2 probit analysis shows that 50% of teased ewes ovulated within 41 h of being exposed to rams.  相似文献   

8.
Many mammals, including cattle, can develop ovarian follicular cysts, but the physiological mechanisms leading to this condition remain undefined. We hypothesized that follicular cysts can develop because estradiol will induce a GnRH/LH surge on one occasion but progesterone exposure is required before another GnRH/LH surge can be induced by estradiol. In experiment 1, 14 cows were synchronized with an intravaginal progesterone insert (IPI) for 7 days, and prostaglandin F(2alpha) was given on the day of IPI removal. Estradiol benzoate (EB; 5 mg i.m.) was given 3 days before IPI removal to induce atresia of follicles. Cows were given a second EB treatment 1 day after IPI removal to induce a GnRH/LH surge in the absence of an ovulatory follicle. All cows had an LH surge following the second EB treatment, and 10 of 14 cows developed a large-follicle anovulatory condition (LFAC) that resembled follicular cysts. These LFAC cows were given a third EB treatment 15 days later, and none of the cows had an LH surge or ovulation. Cows were then either not treated (control, n = 5) or treated for 7 days with an IPI (n = 5) starting 7 days after the third EB injection. Cows were treated for a fourth time with 5 mg of EB 12 h after IPI removal. All IPI-treated, but no control, cows had an LH surge and ovulated in response to the estradiol challenge. In experiment 2, cows were induced to LFAC as in experiment 1 and were then randomly assigned to one of four treatments 1) IPI + EB, 2) IPI + GnRH (100 microg), 3) control + EB, and 4) control + GnRH. Control and IPI-treated cows had a similar LH surge and ovulation when treated with GnRH. In contrast, only IPI-treated cows had an LH surge following EB treatment. Thus, an initial GnRH/LH surge can be induced with high estradiol, but estradiol induction of a subsequent GnRH/LH surge requires exposure to progesterone. This effect is mediated by the hypothalamus, as evidenced by similar LH release in response to exogenous GnRH. This may represent the physiological condition that underlies ovarian follicular cysts.  相似文献   

9.
Sodium pentobarbital (Nembutal) is often used to block the pro-oestrous luteinizing hormone (LH) surge in rats. Nembutal is also known to lower body temperature. This study was designed to investigate whether Nembutal affected the time course of meiosis and timing of ovulation induced by exogenous hormones, and whether the possible effects of Nembutal on these processes were related to temperature. Gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH), the GnRH-analogue Ovalyse, or rat luteinizing hormone (LH) were administered to trigger resumption of meiosis and ovulation; Nembutal (35 mg kg-1 body weight) or saline was given 10 or 60 min later. Plasma profiles of LH were measured and Graafian follicles were studied histologically for meiotic progress and ovulation. Nembutal suppressed the spontaneous surge of LH at pro-oestrus and caused a long-lasting decrease in body temperature. If 1000 ng GnRH was given 2 h before the pro-oestrous LH surge, most of the oocytes had extruded a polar body 10 h later and most follicles had ovulated 14 h later. Nembutal given 1 h after GnRH delayed extrusion of the polar body and ovulation by about 2 h. Nembutal caused a similar delay in ovulation when it was administered after 100 ng of Ovalyse, and it also delayed meiosis when given after 1000 ng of LH. This effect of Nembutal was prevented if body temperature was maintained at 37 degrees C. The delaying effect of Nembutal on meiosis and ovulation induced by exogenous GnRH or LH is related to a long-lasting decrease in body temperature.  相似文献   

10.
The effect of PACAP38 on the LH surge and ovulation was compared with that of PACAP27 and VIP in the same model. The peptides were administered intracerebroventricularly before the critical period of the proestrous stage. PACAP38 was able to inhibit ovulation and to prevent the preovulatory LH surge; however, PACAP27 did not inhibit the ovulation and VIP inhibited the ovulation in 2/11 animals. In those animals of the last two groups in which ovulation occurred, the preovulatory LH surge was higher than in control rats. It is speculated that the opposite effect of PACAP38 and PACAP27 on the preovulatory LH surge and ovulation is possibly mediated through different receptors.  相似文献   

11.

Background  

Follicular fluid contains substances involved in follicle activity, cell differentiation and oocyte maturation. Studies of its components may contribute to better understanding of the mechanisms underlying follicular development and oocyte quality. The canine species is characterized by several ovarian activity features that are not extensively described such as preovulatory luteinization, oocyte ovulated at the GV stage (prophase 1) and poly-oocytic follicles. In this study, we examined the hypothesis that the preovulatory LH surge is associated with changes in steroid and protein content of canine follicular fluid prior to ovulation.  相似文献   

12.
This experiment was designed to determine the age at which estradiol-17beta (E(2)) first induces a preovulatory-like surge of luteinizing hormone (LH) in prepubertal heifers. Responses of prepubertal animals 3 to 4 and 5 to 6 months of age were compared with those of postpubertal heifers that received 25 mg prostaglandin F(2)alpha at 0800 hr on day 15 of the estrous cycle. E(2) (500mug) induced surges of LH in 1 5 heifers 3 to 4 months of age, 3 3 heifers 5 to 6 months of age and 5 5 postpubertal heifers. Duration of response and interval between E(2) injection and peak of the response were longer in postpubertal heifers than in those 5 to 6 months old (P<0.10). Peak response and total amount of LH released were greater in animals 5 to 6 months old (P<0.10). Only one prepubertal heifer had elevated concentrations of progesterone following an LH surge. Four of 5 postpubertal heifers receiving E(2) and 3 of 4 postpubertal heifers receiving corn oil had corpora lutea and similar patterns of progesterone concentrations. We conclude that ability to release an LH surge in response to E(2) develops in heifers between 3 and 5 months of age, but that this induced surge does not cause ovulation.  相似文献   

13.
Considering that there is limited information about the preovulatory LH surge in Zebu cattle (Bos indicus), the purpose of the present work was to assess the LH surge in Nelore cows during the estrous cycle and after ovarian superestimulation of ovarian follicular development with FSH. This information is particularly important to improve superovulatory protocols associated with fixed-time artificial insemination. Nelore cows (n=12) had their estrus synchronized with an intravaginal device containing progesterone (CIDR-B) associated with estradiol benzoate administration (EB, 2.5 mg, i.m., Day 0). Eight days later all animals were treated with PGF2alpha (Day 8) in the morning (8:00 h) and at night, when CIDR devices were removed (20:00 h). Starting 38h after the first PGF2alpha injection, blood sampling and ovarian ultrasonography took place every 4h, during 37 consecutive hours. Frequent handling may have resulted in a stress-induced suppression of LH secretion resulting in only 3 of 12 cows having ovulations at 46.7+/-4.9 and 72.3+/-3.8 h, respectively, after removal of CIDR-B. Thirty days later, the same animals received the described hormonal treatment associated with FSH (Folltropin), total dose=200 mg) administered twice a day, during 4 consecutive days, starting on Day 5. Thirty-six hours after the first injection of PGF2alpha, to minimize stress, only seven blood samples were collected at 4h interval each, and ultrasonography was performed every 12 h until ovulation. In 11 of 12 cows (92%) the LH surge and ovulation were observed 34.6+/-1.6 and 59.5+/-1.9 h, respectively, after removal of progesterone source. The maximum values for LH in those animals were 19.0+/-2.6 ng/ml (mean+/-S.E.M.). It is concluded that, in Nelore cows submitted to a ovarian superstimulation protocol, the LH surge occurs approximately 35 h after removal of intravaginal device containing progesterone, and approximately 12h before the LH surge observed after an induced estrus without ovarian superstimulation.  相似文献   

14.
The effects of chronic treatment with norgestomet on follicular dynamics, corpus luteum growth and function as well as the temporal relationships among body temperature, oestrous behaviour, the luteinizing hormone (LH) surge and ovulation following implant removal were studied in 16 Holstein heifers. Oestrous cycles of the heifers were initially synchronized using 2 injections of prostaglandin F-2 alpha (PGF-2 alpha) 12 days apart. The heifers were then implanted with a norgestomet ear implant for 9 days, beginning either at the middle of the synchronized cycle (dioestrus) or at the end of the synchronized cycle (pro-oestrus). Follicular dynamics, corpus luteum growth and regression, and plasma progesterone were not affected by norgestomet treatment at dioestrus. The dominant follicle present at the time of norgestomet implantation in the pro-oestrus group was maintained during the 9-day implant period of 6 of 8 heifers and ovulated after implant removal. Time from implant removal to onset of standing oestrus and time to LH peak following implant removal were highly correlated with the time of ovulation (r = 0.92 and 0.96, respectively). Onset of standing oestrus and the LH peak and the onset of standing oestrus and peak vaginal and rectal temperatures were also highly correlated (r = 0.96, 0.82 and 0.81, respectively). It is concluded that any decrease in pregnancy rates following treatment with norgestomet is not due to asynchrony among oestrus, the LH surge and ovulation.  相似文献   

15.
The purpose of these experiments was to investigate the mechanism of the anovulatory action of antiprogesterone RU486 (RU486) in rats by studying its effects on follicular growth, secretion of gonadotropins and ovarian steroids, and ovulation. Rats with 4-day estrous cycles received injections (s.c.) of either 0.2 ml oil or 0.1, 1, or 5 mg of RU486 at 0800 and 1600 h on metestrus, diestrus, and proestrus. At the same times, they were bled by jugular venipuncture to determine serum concentrations of luteinizing hormone (LH), follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), 17 beta-estradiol (E), and progesterone (P). On the morning of the day after proestrus, ovulation and histological features of the ovary were recorded. Rats from each group were killed on each day of ovarian cycle to assess follicular development. Rats treated similarly were decapitated at the time of the ovulatory LH surge and blood was collected to measure LH. The serum levels of LH increased and those of FSH decreased during diestrus in rats treated with RU486. Neither E nor P levels differed among the groups. Treatment with RU486 caused both a blockade of the ovulation and an increase in ovarian weight in a dose-dependent manner. At the time of the autopsy (the expected day of ovulation), rats treated with 1 mg RU486 had ovaries presenting both normal and post-ovulatory follicles and unruptured luteinized follicles. Rats treated with 5 mg RU486 presented post-ovulatory follicles without signs of luteinization. The number of follicles undergoing atresia increased in rats treated with RU486. Rats treated with 5 mg RU486 exhibited a significant decrease in ovulatory LH release. The mechanism by which RU486 produces the ovulatory impairment in rats seems to be dual: first, by inducing inadequate follicular development at the time of the LH surge and second, by reducing the amount of ovulatory LH released. The physiological events-decreased basal FSH secretion and follicular atresia-that result from use of RU486 cannot be elucidated from these experiments and should be investigated further.  相似文献   

16.
The negative effect of estradiol-17beta (E2) on LH, based on exogenous E2 treatments, and the reciprocal effect of LH on endogenous E2, based on hCG treatments, were studied throughout the ovulatory follicular wave during a total of 103 equine estrous cycles in seven experiments. An initial study developed E2 treatment protocols that approximated physiologic E2 concentrations during the estrous cycle. On Day 13 (ovulation = Day 0), when basal concentrations of E2 and LH precede the ovulatory surges, exogenous E2 significantly depressed LH concentrations to below basal levels. Ablation of all follicles > or = 10 mm when the largest was > or =20 mm resulted in an increase in percentage change in LH concentration within 8 h that was greater (P < 0.03) than for controls or E2-treated/follicle-ablated mares. Significant decreases in LH occurred when E2 was given when the largest follicle was either > or =25 mm, > or =28 mm, > or =35 mm, or near ovulation. Treatment with 200 or 2000 IU of hCG did not affect E2 concentrations during the initial portion of the LH surge (largest follicle, > or =25 mm), but 2000 IU significantly depressed E2 concentrations before ovulation (largest follicle, > or =35 mm). Results indicated a continuous negative effect of E2 on LH throughout the ovulatory follicular wave and may be related to the long LH surge and the long follicular phase in mares. Results also indicated that a reciprocal negative effect of LH on E2 does not develop until the E2 surge reaches a peak.  相似文献   

17.
Timing of ovulation and changes in plasma progesterone, luteinizing hormone (LH), and prolactin (PRL) during periovulatory stages were determined in Holtzman rats exhibiting regular 4- or 5-day cycles under a daily artificial illumination from 0500 to 1900 h. The 5-day cycling rats ovulated between 0130 and 0930 h on estrus, whereas some of the 4-day cycling animals ovulated as early as about 0130 h and others as late as 1130 h on estrus. Onset time of preovulatory LH and progesterone surges was about 1500 h on proestrus in both the 4- and the 5-day cycling rats. Peak levels of plasma LH and progesterone were measured at 1700 to 1900 h on proestrus, while the first rises and peak values of plasma PRL were evident a few hours earlier than those of plasma LH in the rats with two cycle lengths. Plasma LH levels at 1900 h on proestrus as well as plasma progesterone levels at 1600 and 2300 h on proestrus and at 0130 and 0330 h on estrus were significantly lower in the 5-day cycling rats than in the 4-day cycling animals (p less than 0.05). In contrast, PRL levels from 1500 through 2300 h on proestrus remained consistently higher in 5-day cycling rats than in 4-day cycling rats, and significant differences in PRL levels between these rats were apparent at 1500, 1600, and 2100 h (p less than 0.05-0.01). Thus, these results demonstrate that the 5-day cycling rats exhibit the attenuated magnitude of LH surge accompanied by the augmented preovulatory PRL release, and that plasma progesterone levels reflect the magnitude of LH surge. A tentative working hypothesis concerning the etiology of the 5-day cycle has been proposed.  相似文献   

18.
Fertility of Holstein cows has been decreasing for years and, to a lesser extent, the fertility of heifers too but more recently. A hypothesis to explain this phenomenon may be that the chronology of events leading to ovulation is different for those animals bred nowadays when compared to what was reported previously; this would result in an inappropriate time of insemination. Therefore, two experiments were designed to investigate the relationships among estrus behavior, follicular growth, hormonal events and time of ovulation in Holstein cows and heifers. In the first experiment, the onset of estrus, follicular growth, patterns of estradiol-17beta, progesterone and LH, and the time of ovulation were studied in 12 cyclic Holstein heifers that had their estrus synchronized using the Crestar method; this was done twice, 3 weeks apart. The intervals between estrus and ovulation, estrus and the LH peak, and between the LH peak and ovulation were, respectively, 38.5 h +/-3.0, 9.1 +/- 2.0 and 29.4 h +/-1.5 (mean+/- S.E.M). The variation in the interval between estrus and the LH peak explained 80.6% of the variation in the interval between estrus and ovulation. The intervals between estrus and the LH peak, and estrus and ovulation were correlated with estradiol-17beta peak value (r=-0.423, P <0.04 and r=-0.467, P<0.02, respectively). Positive correlation coefficients for the number of follicle larger than 5 mm, and negative correlation coefficients for the size of the preovulatory follicle with the intervals between estrus and LH peak, LH peak and ovulation, and estrus and ovulation suggest an ovarian control of these intervals. In respect to its role to explain the variation in the interval between estrus and ovulation, the variation in the interval between estrus and the LH peak was evaluated further in a second set of experiments utilizing 12 pubertal Holstein heifers and 35 Holstein cows. The duration of the interval between the beginning of estrus and the LH peak was longer in heifers than in cows (4.15 h versus -1.0 h; P <0.002); the variation for this interval was higher in cows than in heifers (S.E.M.= 1.2 h versus 0.8 h; P=0.01). According to the results of these studies it can be proposed that estradiol and other product(s) of ovarian origin regulate not only the duration of intervals between the onset of estrus and the LH surge but also between the LH surge and ovulation. From the results obtained in the first experiment, it may be postulated that differences observed between cows and heifers for the duration of the interval between onset of estrus and the LH surge as well as for the variation of this interval would be observed also for the interval between the onset of estrus and ovulation. Therefore, on a practical point of view, the long interval between the onset of estrus and ovulation and the high variation of this interval, especially in cows, may be a source of low fertility and should be considered when analysing reproductive disorders.  相似文献   

19.
GnRH treatment (250 ug) 48 h after prostaglandin F(2alpha) in 40 superovulated cows induced a release of LH (increment > 5 ng/ml) in only 13 of the older cows. Eleven of these cows did not yield viable embryos. Thirty-two of 75 cows had preovulatory surge levels of LH 48 h after prostaglandin treatment. Plasma progesterone concentrations were determined in 140 cows at the time that superovulation was initiated. Eighty-four of these donors were superovulated with 40 mg of FSH and 56 donors with 48 mg of FSH. There was no relationship (P > 0.05) between the concentration of progesterone at the start of superovulation with either ovulation rate determined by palpation per rectum or the number of viable embryos per flush. These parameters were also unaffected (P > 0.05) by age of the donor or the dose of FSH. In another group of donors, treatment with 40 mg FSH was compared over a 3-d (n = 28) and a 4-d (n = 18) interval. The donors treated with FSH over a 3-d period had similar ovulation rates but yielded less viable embryos (1.5 v 5.8, P < 0.05). The fertility rate of 33 cows, inseminated 60 and 72 h after prostaglandin, was comparable to the fertility rate of 18 cows inseminated at 60, 72 and 84 h after prostaglandin treatment.  相似文献   

20.
The objective of the study was to determine the timing of ovulation in relation to onset of estrus and the preovulatory LH peak in yaks. For this purpose, a sensitive LH enzymeimmunoassay previously established in buffaloes was successfully validated for measuring the hormone in yak plasma. Plasma LH and progesterone were estimated from blood samples collected from eight non-lactating cycling yaks at 2 h intervals after estrus onset until 6 h after ovulation (ovulation was confirmed by palpation of ovaries per rectum). The mean+/-S.E.M. preovulatory plasma LH peak was 10.11+/-0.35 ng/ml with the values ranging from 8.75 to 11.51 ng/ml in individual yaks. The mean+/-S.E.M. duration of the LH surge was 7.25+/-0.55 h with a range of 6-10 h. Onset of LH surge (mean+/-S.E.M.) occurred 3.0+/-0.65 h after the onset of estrus. Mean plasma progesterone stayed low (<0.25 ng/ml) during the entire duration of sampling. Ovulation occurred 30.5+/-0.82 h (range, 28-34 h) after the onset of estrus and 20.25+/-1.03 h after the end of LH surge. The occurrence of the LH peaks within a narrow time frame of 4-8h post estrus onset in yaks could have contributed to the animals ovulating within a narrow time interval.  相似文献   

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