Duration of the oestrous cycle and changes in plasma hormone concentrations measured after an induced ovulation in scimitar-horned oryx (Oryx dammah)

1996 ◽  
Vol 238 (1) ◽  
pp. 137-148 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. M. Bowen ◽  
G. K. Barrell
1999 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 43
Author(s):  
M.M. Alfuraiji

The aim of this study was to investigate the oestrous cycle of the Arabian camel. Eight female camels (Majaheem) were used. Daily blood samples were collected for 60 days to measure Oestradiol - 178 (E2) and progesterone (P4) levels using radioimmunoassays. The duration of the follicular wave cycle ranged from 25-30 days and the length of oestrous from 5-7 days. P, levels were low (<3.2 nmol/l) throughout the cycle, while E2 levels were high during oestrous. The corpus luteum was therefore not present during the natural cycle suggesting that Arabian camels experienced induced ovulation.


1960 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 147-154 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. G. EDWARDS ◽  
RUTH E. FOWLER

SUMMARY The effects of an injection of pregnant mares' serum (PMS), human chorionic gonadotrophin (HCG), or of superovulation treatment with both of these gonadotrophins on subsequent reproductive behaviour of adult mice and on their response to a second superovulation treatment given shortly afterwards have been studied. An injection of PMS had induced ovulation, but not superovulation, in dioestrous mice autopsied 24 hr later. The injection also induced oestrus and superovulation in many mice (c. 30%) 60–62 hr later, a positive correlation being found between mating and ovulation in these mice. The resumption of the natural oestrous cycle after an injection of PMS was delayed in some of the mice. HCG had induced ovulation in mice in metoestrus-II and dioestrus autopsied 24 hr later. Most mice quickly resumed their natural oestrous cycle after the injection of HCG. If mice were not paired with males after the full superovulation treatment with PMS and HCG, they resumed their natural oestrous cycle within 3–6 days. Ovulation, fertilization and pregnancy during or after this natural oestrus were quite normal. These mice were also capable of further induced oestrus and superovulation when given a second course 1–3 days after the first treatment, though the number of mice that ovulated was lower, and the variability between mice in the number of eggs ovulated was higher, if the second treatment was given 1–2 days after the first. The corpora lutea formed in mice that mated after a superovulation treatment were fully active. A second treatment induced superovulation in most mice, but failed to induce oestrus in the majority of them, especially when given during mid-pseudopregnancy. Fertilization and embryonic development were quite normal in the few mice that mated.


1974 ◽  
Vol 75 (3) ◽  
pp. 569-578 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Buffler ◽  
S. Roser

ABSTRACT The mechanisms involved in the prolongation of the oestrous cycle following LH administration were studied in 4-day cyclic female Wistar rats. In females injected with LH on the morning of dioestrus I there was an increase in ovarian venous blood progesterone as compared with non-injected animals. In both LH-treated females, and those injected with progesterone on the morning of dioestrus I, a slowing up in follicular growth was observed from the afternoon of dioestrus I. The size of follicles greater than 400 urn present in LH or progesterone injected animals on the third day of cycle was similar to the size reached by the same range of follicles in non-injected animals on the second day of the cycle. Hence, the increase in endogenous ovarian progesterone elicited by LH was considered as the cause of the slowing up of follicular growth and therefore of the lengthening of the oestrous cycle duration in female rats injected with LH at the beginning of 4-day cycle.


1972 ◽  
Vol 69 (2) ◽  
pp. 267-280 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard D. Peppler

ABSTRACT Intact 5-day cycling rats were killed between 8–10 a. m. on each day of the oestrous cycle; experimental rats were unilaterally ovariectomized (ULO) at 9 a. m. on day 1 (oestrus) and killed between 8 and 10 a. m. on days 2, 3, 4 or 1 of the subsequent cycle. Pituitary and plasma concentrations of FSH and LH were measured in both groups of rats. Pituitary FSH concentration was measured by the Steelman-Pohley method with slight modification; plasma FSH by the Igarashi-McCann assay and pituitary and plasma LH concentration by the OAAD method. In intact rats, pituitary FSH values remained constant for the first three days of the cycle, increased on day 4 and reverted to early cycle values by day 5. Plasma FSH increased between days 2 and 3 and days 5 and 1. Pituitary LH concentration remained the same for days 1 and 2; increased two-fold on days 3 and 4, and increased further by day 5. Plasma LH increased between days 2 and 3; other differences between successive cycle days were not apparent. Following ULO on day 1, pituitary FSH increased steadily, but not significantly, for the remaining cycle. Plasma FSH did not change from day 2 through day 1 of the subsequent cycle. Pituitary LH remained low on day 2, increased sharply by day 3 and decreased (50 %) by day 4. Plasma LH also increased between days 2 and 3. Other differences between successive days following unilateral ovariectomy on day 1 were not apparent. Correlation of gonadotrophin activity with follicular development suggests that the mechanism of compensatory ovulation in the rat may be one of an increase in time of exposure to a constant gonadotrophic level for the duration of the oestrous cycle rather than to increased levels of the gonadotrophin.


1972 ◽  
Vol 70 (3) ◽  
pp. 582-590
Author(s):  
B. K. Davis ◽  
I. Noske ◽  
M. C. Chang

ABSTRACT Ethinyloestradiol (EO) fed for various periods before mating to female hamsters affected the timing of mating and pregnancy rate. Slight effects on ovulation, foetal-crown rump length and resorption may have occurred, but effects on implantation were not apparent among pregnant hamsters. The response observed depended upon the feeding schedule adopted: hamsters fed 2.5 mg EO in a single dose, on day 3 before mating, mated normally but had a significantly lower pregnancy rate; on the other hand, animals fed 2.5 mg EO (0.21 mg/day) over three oestrous cycles, days 14–3 before mating, showed variations in the time of mating but had an essentially normal pregnancy rate; and, a group of hamsters who received the same total amount of EO (0.63 mg/day) over one oestrous cycle, days 6–3 premating, showed untowards effects by the steroid on both the timing of mating and pregnancy rate. The implications of these results are considered in relation to fertility control.


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