Initiation of parturition and lactation in the sow: effects of delaying parturition with medroxyprogesterone acetate

1990 ◽  
Vol 124 (3) ◽  
pp. 475-484 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. L. Whitely ◽  
P. E. Hartmann ◽  
D. L. Willcox ◽  
G. D. Bryant-Greenwood ◽  
F. C. Greenwood

ABSTRACT The synthetic progestagen, medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA), was administered to sows in late pregnancy with the objective of slightly delaying the time of farrowing and thereby providing more marked associations between hormonal changes and the termination of pregnancy, and the initiation of farrowing and lactation in this species. MPA was administered orally (140 mg, twice daily) to eight sows in late pregnancy on days 112, 113 and 114 of gestation. Parturition was then induced to occur on day 116 by injecting 200 μg cloprostenol i.m. on day 115 of gestation. The peripartum changes in the plasma concentrations of progesterone, cortisol, oestradiol-17β, relaxin, prolactin, lactose and 13,14-dihydro-15-keto prostaglandin F2α (PGFM) were measured in these sows together with a group of untreated sows. The gestational length for the MPA-treated sows (116·3 ± 0·3 days, mean±s.e.m.) was significantly (P<0·01) greater compared with the untreated sows (114·9 ± 0·3 days). Plasma progesterone declined earlier (P<0·05) with respect to the time of parturition in the treated sows compared with the untreated group. With respect to the timing of parturition, the time at which maximal concentrations of relaxin were attained and the timing of the subsequent decline were earlier in the MPA-treated sows. In both groups of sows, the concentration of relaxin increased before the decline in plasma progesterone. In the untreated sows, the concentration of PGFM increased either slightly before or at the same time as the decline in plasma progesterone, whereas in sows treated with MPA, progesterone concentrations began to decline before any significant increase in the plasma concentration of PGFM. The profiles of cortisol, oestradiol-17β and PGFM were similar in both groups of sows. In both groups of sows, the timing of the initial increase in the concentration of plasma prolactin coincided with a similar rise in plasma lactose (P<0·01). Plasma progesterone either declined earlier or at the same time as the rise in plasma lactose (P<0·01) in the treated group of sows only. We conclude that since the prepartum changes in the concentration of progesterone and relaxin occurred before significant changes in the concentration of PGFM in the MPA-treated sows, the nature of the luteolytic factor and the mechanism by which it exerts its action remains obscure. The higher concentration of lactose in the mammary secretion at birth in the MPA-treated sows compared with the untreated group suggested that lactogenesis was initiated earlier with respect to parturition following MPA treatment. Furthermore, the administration of MPA to sows in late pregnancy delayed the onset of parturition but did not inhibit lactogenesis. Journal of Endocrinology (1990) 124, 475–484

2000 ◽  
Vol 135 (2) ◽  
pp. 203-209 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. S. EL-BELELY ◽  
A. A. AL-QARAWI ◽  
H. A. ABDEL-RAHMAN

Thirty-two pregnant ewes (Saudi breeds) selected during 1998 and 1999, were studied throughout the whole gestational length and around parturition. Concentrations (mean±S.E.) of plasma progesterone (3·9±0·28 ng/ml), oestradiol-17β (20·5±2·33 pg/ml) and cortisol (4·8±0·58 ng/ml) remained fairly constant throughout the early stages of pregnancy. Characteristic changes in these steroids were evident during the prepartal period involving a steady decrease in plasma progesterone beginning 8 days before parturition; a remarkably consistent increase in oestradiol-17β 4–6 days prior to delivery, peaking in excess of 250 pg/ml at the birth day; and a fivefold increase to 23·7±2·12 ng/ml in plasma cortisol 2 days preceding delivery, showing a large increase during the day of lambing. The timing of the marked reduction in the platelet count and the coagulation screening tests including prothrombin time (PT), activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) and thrombin time (TT), during the prepartal period, were significantly correlated with the temporal changes in the circulating steroid hormone concentrations. The results suggest that the characteristic prepartal hormonal changes might provide the basis for shifting the fairly balanced coagulable state throughout gestational periods to a mild to moderate degree of hypercoagulability during parturition which is needed to limit the possible intra- and post-partum uterine haemorrhage.


1981 ◽  
Vol 90 (2) ◽  
pp. 179-191 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. HENDRICKS ◽  
C. A. BLAKE

The effects of varying amounts of copulatory stimulation on patterns of plasma concentrations of prolactin and progesterone were evaluated in 3- and 12-month-old female rats. The 12-month-old group included rats which still exhibited oestrous cycles and rats in persistent vaginal oestrus (PVO). The extent of copulatory stimulation was defined by the number of intromissions received during mating: ≤5,15 or > 50. Blood samples were drawn over the 8 days after mating through a cannula inserted into the right external jugular vein. Plasma from the samples was assayed for prolactin and progesterone. In aged but still cyclic rats, pregnancy rates were positively correlated with the number of intromissions received during mating. Only one rat in PVO became pregnant. All animals which became pregnant and rats in PVO which, after mating, exhibited a disruption of the pattern of PVO, showed the nocturnal surge of plasma prolactin characteristic of pregnant and pseudopregnant rats. While these surges persisted until day 8 after mating in pregnant animals, they were absent by this time in the rats in PVO. Prolactin surges were present in some but not all of the aged rats which did not become pregnant. Progesterone concentrations were raised in all pregnant animals except the one pregnant rat in PVO and, while not related to the number of intromissions, concentrations were higher 8 days after mating in young compared with those in aged pregnant rats. Plasma progesterone was low in rats in PVO regardless of disruption of the pattern of PVO. We have concluded that the failure of limited copulatory stimulation to induce pregnancy in older rats results, at least in part, from its failure to initiate nocturnal prolactin surges. Nevertheless, our data suggest that matings which are not experimentally limited should provide ample stimulation to establish such surges. Although reduced plasma concentrations of prolactin and progesterone at pro-oestrus and reduced plasma progesterone through part of gestation may contribute to decreasing fertility in aged rats, other unidentified factors appear to be involved in mediating the capacity of extensive copulatory stimulation to induce pregnancy in these animals.


1987 ◽  
Vol 113 (1) ◽  
pp. 97-101 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. J. Taylor

ABSTRACT An inhibitor of 3β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (3β-HSD) activity was administered to sheep in late pregnancy. A rapid fall in plasma progesterone concentrations followed, associated with premature delivery by all animals 44±3 h (s.e.m.) after administration of inhibitor. A significant (about twofold) increase in plasma concentrations of oestradiol-17β was detected immediately before delivery. These results demonstrate, in contrast to previous reports, that 3β-HSD inhibitors have the capacity consistently to induce premature delivery associated with increased oestrogen release in sheep. J. Endocr. (1987) 113, 97–101


1981 ◽  
Vol 34 (4) ◽  
pp. 445 ◽  
Author(s):  
KR Nicholas ◽  
PE Hartmann

The relationship between progesterone, prolactin, corticosteroids and corticosteroid binding globulin . (CBO) activity in plasma and the initiation of lactation were studied in normal parturient rats, and rats either ovariohysterectomized or Caesarean-sectioned on day 19 of gestation. In chronically cannulated rats the decline in plasma progesterone to low values � 10 p.g/l) in normal parturient rats 20 h before term and in Caesarean-sectioned rats 10--14 h after surgery was closely related to an increase in plasma prolactin.


1989 ◽  
Vol 120 (3) ◽  
pp. 489-496 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. J. Reiter ◽  
I. Sabry ◽  
M. Nordio ◽  
M. K. Vaughan ◽  
S. Migliaccio

ABSTRACT The onset of cessation of oestrous cyclicity and associated organ and hormonal changes were compared in random-bred (RB) and inbred (IB) female Syrian hamsters kept either under short days (8 h light:16 h darkness; 8L:16D) or long days (14L:10D) and given daily afternoon injections of 25 μg melatonin. In response to short-day treatment, 100% of the IB hamsters exhibited vaginal acyclicity within 35 days; by comparison, none of the RB animals were acyclic at this time. The IB hamsters also exhibited other changes associated with exposure to short days, including increased body weight, enlarged ovaries, regressed uteri, elevated pituitary concentrations of FSH, and depressed pituitary and plasma concentrations of prolactin. At this time, only the pituitary FSH levels were increased in the RB animals kept under the same short-day conditions. In a second experiment, RB and IB female Syrian hamsters were maintained under long days (14L:10D) and the rate of reproductive regression in response to daily afternoon injections of melatonin was compared. After 8 weeks of melatonin injections, 80% of the IB females were anoestrous, while all RB hamsters were still exhibiting 4-day oestrous cycles. Other changes associated with melatonin administration in the IB females included a marked drop in uterine weight and a depression in pituitary and plasma prolactin levels. The RB hamsters, although they were all still cyclic after 8 weeks, had increased body and ovarian weights, increased pituitary concentrations of FSH, and lower pituitary and plasma prolactin levels. The results show that the IB strain of Syrian hamster, compared with the RB strain, responded more quickly with vaginal acyclicity to both exposure to short days and daily injections of melatonin. On the other hand, the IB hamsters responded more slowly in terms of oestrous acyclicity to melatonin injections than to treatment with short photoperiod. Journal of Endocrinology (1989) 120, 489–496


1998 ◽  
Vol 1998 ◽  
pp. 179-179
Author(s):  
H. M. Miller ◽  
W. T. Dixon ◽  
G. R. Foxcroft ◽  
F. X. Aherne

Lactogenesis is triggered by a rapid decline in plasma progesterone concentration combined with a peak in plasma prolactin concentration; in mice, there is a concurrent loss of mammary progesterone receptors (Haslam and Shyamala, 1980). The aims of this experiment were to determine the pattern of change of progesterone receptor and prolactin receptor mRNA during late gestation and early lactation and to determine whether abundance of mRNA for the two receptors are related to each other, to plasma concentrations of progesterone and prolactin or to piglet performance.


1995 ◽  
Vol 7 (5) ◽  
pp. 1163 ◽  
Author(s):  
PA Towers ◽  
L Martin

Blood was collected from breeding-season and pregnant P. poliocephalus females shot in the wild and from captive pregnant and ovariectomized P. poliocephalus and P. scapulatus females. Peripheral plasma progesterone concentrations measured by radioimmunoassay were similar to those obtained by gas chromatography-mass spectroscopy: in intact non-pregnant P. poliocephalus females without corpora lutea (CLs) values ranged from 2 to 30 ng mL-1; after ovariectomy, they ranged from 1 to 85 ng mL-1. A significant source of progesterone in these bats may be the adrenal. In P. poliocephalus, peripheral plasma progesterone concentrations showed relatively little change over the breeding season or in early pregnancy when a CL formed, but increased from mid pregnancy to reach 200-800 ng mL-1 in late pregnancy. A mid-pregnancy ovary with CL contained 2.80 ng progesterone whereas the contralateral ovary contained 0.13 ng. Overall, CL size decreased during pregnancy and was negatively correlated with plasma progesterone concentrations. In late pregnancy, the main source of progesterone appears to be the placenta; plasma concentrations increase with placental growth and are significantly correlated with placental weight, and placentas contain 4-8 micrograms progesterone g-1. There was no evidence that progesterone concentrations fall before parturition. Limited observations indicated that peripheral progesterone concentrations follow similar patterns in P. scapulatus.


1981 ◽  
Vol 90 (2) ◽  
pp. 151-158 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. L. SHELDRICK ◽  
A. P. RICKETTS ◽  
A. P. F. FLINT

A major product of progesterone metabolism by the goat placenta in vitro was found to be 5β-pregnane-3α,20α-diol. The concentration of this steroid has been measured by radioimmunoassay in the peripheral circulation during pregnancy. Peripheral plasma concentrations of 5β-pregnane-3α,20α-diol were low (less than 6 nmol/l) in anoestrous and non-pregnant ovariectomized goats, and during the first month of pregnancy but increased progressively after day 45 of pregnancy, reaching 78–94 nmol/l between days 112 and 142. Thereafter levels declined before term. Changes in the plasma concentration of 5β-pregnane-3α,20α-diol during pregnancy in the goat therefore resembled those of progesterone in the sheep. Plasma concentrations of 5β-pregnane-3α,20α-diol between day 70 and term were not influenced by repeated administration of medroxyprogesterone acetate from days 51 to 82 or by lutectomy in goats treated with medroxyprogesterone acetate. Secretion of 5β-pregnane-3α,20α-diol by the uterus and its contents was indicated by a positive venous–arterial difference across the uterus between days 128 and 141 in three ovariectomized pregnant goats receiving medroxyprogesterone acetate. Comparison of the rates of metabolism of progesterone by homogenates of placenta in vitro showed that the placental tissue from goats was three times more active in this respect than was tissue from sheep. The ratio of the plasma concentrations of 5β-pregnane-3α,20α-diol and progesterone in late pregnancy in ovariectomized or lutectomized goats exceeded by a factor of 10 that in sheep at a comparable stage of gestation. It is suggested that reductive metabolism of progesterone before it is secreted may account for the inability of the placenta to maintain pregnancy after ovariectomy in goats.


1998 ◽  
Vol 1998 ◽  
pp. 179-179
Author(s):  
H. M. Miller ◽  
W. T. Dixon ◽  
G. R. Foxcroft ◽  
F. X. Aherne

Lactogenesis is triggered by a rapid decline in plasma progesterone concentration combined with a peak in plasma prolactin concentration; in mice, there is a concurrent loss of mammary progesterone receptors (Haslam and Shyamala, 1980). The aims of this experiment were to determine the pattern of change of progesterone receptor and prolactin receptor mRNA during late gestation and early lactation and to determine whether abundance of mRNA for the two receptors are related to each other, to plasma concentrations of progesterone and prolactin or to piglet performance.


1986 ◽  
Vol 66 (3) ◽  
pp. 643-651 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. A. FITZGERALD ◽  
G. A. EVERETT ◽  
J. APGAR

The effect of low dietary Zn intake upon several plasma endocrine and metabolic profiles was examined during late gestation in the ewe. Thirty adult, primiparous Finncross ewes were fed a low Zn diet with (+Zn, n = 14) or without (0Zn, n = 16) supplemental Zn in the drinking water starting day 1 of pregnancy. Although the mean prepartum progesterone and prolactin concentrations were lower (P < 0.05 and P < 0.01, respectively) in 0Zn than in +Zn ewes, the peak prolactin concentrations in 0Zn ewes at lambing were similar to +Zn ewes. Both basal and thyrotropin-releasing-hormone (TRH)-induced prolactin release were less (P < 0.01) in 0Zn ewes 2 d postpartum. Plasma concentrations of 13, 14-dihydro-15-keto prostaglandin F2α (PGFM) of ewes sampled within 45 min post-lambing were lower (P < 0.05) in 0Zn ewes. There was no difference in cortisol concentrations within 45 min after lambing between 0Zn and + Zn ewes. Plasma protein concentrations in 0Zn ewes were higher (P < 0.01) than those in +Zn ewes during pregnancy. In summary, these data show that low Zn intake in the pregnant ewe affected several endocrine and metabolic plasma parameters associated with normal pregnancy and parturition. Key words: Zinc, parturition, dystocia, feed intake, ovine


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