Characteristics of prostaglandin F measurements in the ovarian circulation during the oestrous cycle and early pregnancy in the cow

D. Wolfenson, W. W. Thatcher, M. Drost, D. Caton, D. B. Foster, M. M. LeBlanc

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

28 Scopus citations

Abstract

Holstein or crossbred beef cows were anaesthetized on Days 15 to 17 after oestrus; the ovarian artery (OA), ovarian (utero-ovarian) vein (OV) and a peripheral artery (PA), were catheterized for chronic blood sampling. Beginning on the day after surgery, 6 sequential blood samples were collected every 30-40 min twice daily from 8 cyclic and 6 pregnant cows during Days 16-20: 818 blood samples (including 216 OA and PA concurrent arterial pairs) were collected. Overall least squares means for PGF concentrations (pg/ml) in the OV, OA and PA of cyclic cows were 562, 228 and 106, respectively. A significant (P < 0.01) OA-PA difference (122 pg/ml) suggests that a local transfer system, between uterine venous effluent and ovarian arterial affluent, is functional in the cow. A transfer efficiency of about 1% was estimated. In cyclic cows differences in OA-PA concentrations of PGF were minimal on Days 16-18 and increased to about 160 pg/ml during luteal regression (Days 19-20). In pregnant cows a biphasic OA-PA pattern of difference of PGF between days was detected, with a peak on Day 18 (136 pg/ml) which was not apparent on Days 19-20. Amplitude of PGF spikes in the OA was significantly higher in cyclic (725 pg/ml) than in pregnant cows (397 pg/ml). We suggest that pregnancy suppresses PGF delivery to the ovarian circulation, resulting in maintenance of the corpus luteum in pregnant cows.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)491-499
Number of pages9
JournalJournal of Reproduction and Fertility
Volume75
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 1985
Externally publishedYes

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Characteristics of prostaglandin F measurements in the ovarian circulation during the oestrous cycle and early pregnancy in the cow'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this