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Вязка и всё о ней

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Программа продуктивной вязки суки.

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Истинная цель любой программы вязки состоит в том, чтобы количество активных сперматозоидов, попавших в матку и яйцеводы, было достаточным для оплодотворения зрелых яйцеклеток. Яйцеклетки суки обычно достигают зрелости в течение 3-8 дней после пика ЛГ (лютеинизирующего гормона). Процесс созревания начинается через 24-48 часов после овуляции первичных (незрелых) овоцитов. В этой связи возникает необходимость в методах, позволяющих точно определить день выброса ЛГ. Об этом можно судить по изменениям поведения, цитологической картины влагалищных мазков, результатов вагиноскопии и концентрации прогестерона в сыворотке крови суки. Ни один из этих критериев не является абсолютно точным, но в комплексе они позволяют более-менее точно определить оптимальное время вязки. С этой же целью можно пользоваться прямым определением концентрации ЛГ в сыворотке. Кроме того, природа дала некоторую поблажку репродукции собак – нормальные сперматозоиды, находясь в половых органах суки, остаются жизнеспособными и сохраняют способность оплодотворять зрелые овоциты в течение от 4-6, а в некоторых случаях и до 11 дней. Оплодотворение зрелых яйцеклеток наиболее успешно происходит в последние 4-5 дней половой охоты.
На основании этой информации заводчикам рекомендуется следующая программа вязки сук, позволяющая достичь наибольшего успеха.

Критерий 1: поведение. Появление у суки характерных для течки изменений поведения, которые обычно называют «половой охотой», сигнализирует о готовности суки у вязке. Как правило, проявление признаков половой охоты свидетельствует о плодовитости суки. Позитивная поведенческая реакция суки на кобеля и опытного кобеля на суку служит простым, надежным и не требующим материальных затрат методом определения оптимального срока вязки. Вязку следует проводить сразу, как только сука проявит половую охоту, а затем ее повторяют с интервалом 2-3-4 дня (при продолжительной половой охоте) или 1-2 дня (при кратковременной половой охоте) вплоть до окончания поведенческих признаков половой охоты. Средняя продолжительность этого периода 7-9 дней.

Критерий 2: цитологические изменения влагалищных мазков. Цитология прекрасно отражает изменения концентрации эстрогена в плазме крови. Однако по результатам цитологического исследования не удается установить время пика ЛГ, овуляции или оплодотворения яйцеклетки. Увеличения количества поверхностных ороговевающих клеток до 80-90% может произойти в любой день, начиная от 6 дня до и заканчивая 4 днем после пика ЛГ (овуляции). Как только количество поверхностных ороговевающих клеток в мазке превысит 60-80%, следует проследить за реакцией суки на кобеля. Результаты цитологического исследования должны коррелировать с другими критериями и с положительной реакцией суки на кобеля. Рекомендуется вязать суку весь период половой охоты, пока количество ороговевающих клеток превышает 80%.

Критерий 3: эндоскопия влагалища. Эндоскопия влагалища может быть использована в качестве вспомогательного метода определения времени вязки. Легкое сморщивание слизистой оболочки (кренуляция) ассоциируется с предовуляторным выбросом ЛГ. Именно в этот период следует начинать проведение вязки или искусственного осеменения.

Критерий 4: концентрация прогестерона в сыворотке крови. С этой целью обычно применяют диагностикумы, позволяющие определить уровень прогестерона в условиях клиники. Кровь берут ежедневно или через день, пока концентрация не превысит 1 нг/мл, на основании чего можно предположить, что выброс Лг произошел или начинается. Повышение концентрации прогестерона и ЛГ начинается одновременно, при этом в день выброса ЛГ уровень прогестерона достигает 1,0-1,9 нг/мл (3,1-5,9 нмоль/л). На следующий день (т. е. за день до овуляции) концентрация прогестерона в сыворотке крови составляет 2,0-3,9 нг/мл (6,2-12,1 нмоль/л), а в день овуляции – 4,0-10,0 нг/мл (12,4-31,0 нмоль/л).

Критерий 5: концентрация ЛГ в сыворотке крови. Повышение концентрации ЛГ является наиболее точным маркером овуляции. Кровь для исследования следует брать ежедневно, поскольку повышение уровня ЛГ в большинстве случаев происходит внезапно и носит быстротечный характер. Выброс ЛГ и затем резкое снижение его концентрации происходят обычно в течение суток, и если этот день пропустить, то изменения могут остаться незамеченными. Однако этот метод является весьма дорогостоящим.

Недостаточно надежные критерии:
- количество дней с начала проэструса. Распространенная практика вязки на10 день с появления кровянистых выделений основана на мнении, что средняя продолжительность проэструса составляет 9 дней. Однако следует иметь в виду, что этот период у разных сук варьирует от нескольких дней до 3 недель.
- просветление влагалищных выделений. У части здоровых сук практически не наблюдается геморрагических выделений, а у других сохраняются до конца половой охоты.
- набухание вульвы. Во время проэструса вульва отекает и увеличивается в размерах. К моменту эструса наружные половые органы становятся мягким, спавшимися и пластичными. Однако для дифференциации этих изменений необходимо обладать достаточным опытом.
- присутствие глюкозы во влагалищном секрете. Повышение концентрации прогестерона может сопровождаться повышением концентрации глюкозы во влагалищном секрете. Этот признак не постоянен и не рекомендуется для определения сроков вязки.
- поведение кобеля. Неопытный кобель готов к вязке с сукой всегда. Поэтому более информативным является поведение суки.

Рекомендации по проведению программы вязки.
Необходимо регистрировать даты набухания наружных половых органов, начала кровянистых выделений и появление у кобелей повышенного интереса к суке.
На 5-6 дни (можно раньше при предыдущих неудачных вязках) проэструса к суке можно привести кобеля для оценки поведения суки.
Вязку следует проводить в тот же день, когда у суки появляется позитивное отношение к кобелям. Затем вязку повторяют с интервалом 2-4 дня, пока сука не начнет от нее отказываться.
Влагалищные мазки делают с 5 дня (можно раньше) до положительного результата ежедневно или через день, можно с сочетании с вагиноскопией и определением концентрации прогестерона или ЛГ.
Регистрируют все данные по продолжительности проэструса, эструса, поведению собаки, особенностям вязки, количеству щенков и пр. Проанализировав все эти данные по результатам нескольких циклов, можно относительно точно предположить сроки овуляции наступающей течки.

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Несколько полезных статей на английском языке:

Canine Reproduction

Cytologic Changes Through the Canine Estrous Cycle

Management of Reproduction: Small Animals : Breeding Management : Dogs

Modern breeding management in dogs

Dog Breeding Pre-Mate Test Pads

Nutritional Management of the Bitch: Pre-breeding to Whelping

Lizzie

Canine Ovulation Timing

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Её Величество Овуляция (хроника одной течки)

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In: Recent Advances in Small Animal Reproduction, Concannon P.W., England E.and
Verstegen J. (Eds.)
Publisher: International Veterinary Information Service (wwwivis.org)

Canine Pregnancy: Predicting Parturition and Timing Events of Gestation
(9 May 2000)
P.W. Concannon

Department of Biomedical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York,
USA.

Introduction
Many aspects of canine pregnancy are unique among veterinary domestic species. Therefore, an understanding
of the time course and clinical correlates of ovulation, fertilization, embryo and fetal development, and
pregnancy specific changes in maternal physiology is essential when providing clinical services such as
breeding management and monitoring of pregnancy [1-4]. It is also important for decision-making in cases of
pregnancy failure, elective caesarian section and dystocia. One important fact is that gestation length and
events of gestation are very repeatable and predicable when viewed in relation to the time of ovulation or the
preceding the luteinizing hormone (LH) surge (Table 1 and 2). That is true, despite the fact that the normal
interval from breeding to whelping can range from 55 to 70 days.
Fertilization and Gestation Length
The reason why gestation length in dogs is relatively consistent when measured from the day of ovulation but
highly variable when measured from the day of breeding is partly understood. In the vast majority of bitches
parturition occurs 64, 65 or 66 days after the ovulatory surge in LH [1]. The latter represents the acute release
of LH from the pituitary in late proestrus or early estrus. The LH surge triggers the event of ovulation. Since
the day of the LH surge can be measured or estimated with reasonable accuracy, timing events from that day,
and using it as the reference point (Day 0) can be helpful. A 64 - 66 day gestation length measured from the
LH surge to parturition is the same as a 62, 63 or 64 day interval between ovulation and parturition, since
ovulation has been estimated to occur 2 days after the surge in LH [4].
In contrast, using the day of mating as a reference point, as observed in cases of just a single mating or
insemination, parturition can occur as early as 56 days later and as late as 68 days later. Similarly, a large
variation in apparent gestation length can be encountered when counting from the first of multiple matings or
the last of multiple matings, the extremes encountered differing by 2 weeks. For instance, if a bitch is held for
an aggressive stud dog and forced to mate starting 3 - 5 days before the LH surge, the interval from first
mating to whelping may be as long as 69 - 70 days. And, in rare instances where a bitch is still fertile 9 or 10
days after the LH surge and is bred then, the interval from mating to whelping can be as short as 55 or 56
days.
Part of the explanation is that dog sperm may, in some instances, survive in the bitch's tract for up to 7 or even
9 days and still remain viable in terms of being able to achieve fertilization and result in pregnancy. It is
possible that in dogs as in other species, many sperm die or loose fertility after 1 or 2 days. However, the
number that retain fertility for 2 days is sufficiently high in dogs that fertility and fecundity are not affected by
matings on the day of the LH surge, 2 days before ovulation. Thus, in such pregnancies, the sperm survived 2
days before potentially penetrating the oocyte, and the chromatin had to survive another 2 to 3 days to
function as a male pronucleus which fuses with the female pronucleus to form the 1-cell zygote. Fertility
declines with matings earlier than the day of the LH surge (i.e. mating 3 or more days before ovulation).
However, litters have occasionally been obtained from forced matings, matings by aggressive males, and
artificial inseminations of fresh semen as early as 3 - 5 days before the LH surge. Sperm deposition in such
cases was 5 to 7 days before ovulation and at least 7 to 9 days before oocyte maturation. Another part of the
explanation for the large variation encountered in apparent gestation lengths lies with the timing of egg
maturation in this species. In dogs (and foxes), unlike most other species, the eggs are still immature when
they are ovulated (i.e., they are still primary oocytes) and they do not complete meiosis and become secondary
(mature) oocytes until probably 2.5 to 3 days after ovulation. An egg must be a mature, secondary oocyte
containing a "female" pronucleus before the "male" pronucleus of a sperm can fuse with it to complete the
process of fertilization by forming the nucleus of the new one-cell embryo. In early-mated bitches, a sperm
probably penetrates each egg shortly after it is ovulated, but the male pronucleus once formed has to wait for
the egg to mature. In late-bred bitches, the female pronucleus of the matured egg is ready to fuse with the
pronucleus of a sperm that subsequently penetrates as soon as the male-pronucleus is formed.
The interval of nearly 3 days required for oocyte maturation after ovulation has been estimated in at least two
ways. One is based on estimating how long after ovulation that matings from different males can still result in
pups with different sires. Another is estimation of the time after ovulation at which mating with short-lived
frozen-thawed sperm results in pregnancies. Because of this phenomenon of "delayed" oocyte maturation,
bitches can readily give birth to litters with multiple sires when there are matings by different males before
ovulation.
Timing of Fertilization, Fertility and Fecundity
Thus, it appears that fertilization to the point of nuclear fusion can be accomplished no earlier than about 3
days after ovulation (and, thus, 5 days after the LH surge). Following maturation of the egg to
secondary-oocyte status, the fertile life span of an unfertilized egg may be only 1 or 2 days in some instances,
since fertility declines if matings are delayed until 4 and 5 days after ovulation (i.e., 6 and 7 days after the LH
surge). That is, both litter size and pregnancy rate decline when mating occurs more than 2 days after the
maturation of the oocyte. Thus, with a narrow 2-day window for optimal fertilization to occur, it is reasonable
that gestation length is consistent when measured relative to the day of the LH surge, or to the day of
ovulation. However, some bitches may have one or more fertile oocytes survive to as late as 7 or even 8 days
after ovulation which corresponds to 9 or 10 days after the LH surge. While fertility is typically low with
matings this late, when pregnancy does occur the gestation length is usually the same that as in other bitches,
i.e., with parturition occurring at 64 - 66 days after the LH surge (and 62 - 64 days after ovulation). The above
scenario is the basis of well documented cases of bitches with exceptionally short apparent gestation lengths,
giving birth to litters as "early" as 55 to 56 days after breeding. Why true gestation length is not always
obviously longer in these "late-bred" bitches is not clear, but there are two likely reasons. First, there is as yet
unpublished evidence that eggs fertilized 2 days after maturation divide slightly faster than eggs penetrated by
sperm before maturation. (Tsutsui, 1999, personal communication) Second, it is likely that the timing of
implantation is in part related to a sequence of events regulated by the timing of the changes in serum
concentrations of estrogen and progesterone. These do not differ with the time of mating or fertilization or
early embryo cleavage rate. It is likely then that there is a very narrow window of time in whh the uterus is
receptive for implantation. Implantation is estimated to occur at Day 22 - 23 after the LH surge [6]. In some
instances of a very late mating, there are anecdotal reports that, because of the resulting small litter size, the
fetal signal for parturition is weak, and parturition may be delayed for 1 - 2 days, with an apparent increase in
gestation length. However, documented evidence for this has not been published.
It is clinically useful to consider that gestation length in bitches is in most cases 64 - 66 days, when measured
as the interval from LH surge to parturition. However, it is important to realize that intervals of 63 and 67 days
have been seen in some normal, uncomplicated pregnancies and should not be considered out of the ordinary.
Furthermore, there can be error of up to 1 days in estimating the day of the LH surge. Nevertheless, estimating
the day of whelping as 65 days after the estimated day of the LH surge can be helpful to dog owners and aid in
scheduling whelping management services. Timing the major event of pregnancy from the estimated day of
the LH surge can also aid in pregnancy testing and pregnancy management services (Tables 1 and 2).

Table 1.
Events and clinical correlates of canine pregnancy through the time of implantation
and pregnancy detection, aligned to days from pre ovulatory LH surge.

Days Events and changes in parameters
-25 to -3 Onset of proestrus (heat) - average Day -9
-3 to + 6 Onset of estrus behavior - average Day 0 to 1
-3 to +8 First acceptance of intromission and mating - average Day 1
-3 First day a single mating has significant fertility
0 Pre ovulatory LH surge - time of major increase in serum LH
0 Increase in progesterone from levels of 0.3 - 08 ng to levels of 0.9 to 3.0 ng/ml
0 Onset of peak fertility for single matings by high-fertility studs
2 Ovulation at 38 - 58 h after LH surge
3 Primary oocyte(s) in oviduct. Potential penetration by sperm
4 Oocytes presumably still without polar body or female pronucleus
5 Maturation of oocytes in distal oviduct.. Fertilization completed if already bred
6 Bred: 1-2 cell embryo. Non-bred: mature oocytes still fertile
7 Bred: 2 cell embryo. Non-bred: viability of some oocytes declines or lost
8 Bred: 4 cell embryo. Non-bred: late mating results in small or no litter
9 Bred early: 4-8 cell embryo. Bred later: 4-8 cell embryo. Mating rarely fertile
10 Oviductal embryos: 8-16 cells
11 Oviductal embryos: 16 -32 cell morulae
12 Morulae inside zona pellucida found in uterine horns
13 Intra-uterine migration of blastocysts between horns
14 Migration within uterus continues
15 Ultrasound (U/S) does not detect any difference due to pregnancy
16 Enlargement of embryos and thinning of zona pellucida
17 Blastocyst enlargement continues. Migration stops
18 Zona enclosed blastocyst in > 1 mm diameter uterine vesicle. U/S detectable
19 Uterine vesicle visible on U/S. Embryo + zona pellucida. Mucoid coat
20 Embryo expansion in >2 mm x 3-6 mm uterine vesicle. Zona absent. Thin coat
21 Blastocysts touch, but are still unattached to, endometrium. Cannot be flushed
22 Uterine swellings grossly visible by d 21-23. Embryo attached. Invasion begins
23 Placental trophectoderm invasion of endometrium continues. U/S detects embryo.
24 Heart beats may be visible on U/S. Palpable 1 cm uterine swellings
25 U/S detection of heart beat
26 Rises in serum relaxin and acute phase proteins (fibrinogen) in some bitches
28 U/S detects zonary placental mass. Relaxin typically detectable
Table 2. Events and clinical correlates of canine pregnancy from implantation to parturition,
aligned to days from pre ovulatory LH surge.
Days Events and changes in parameters
22 Uterine swellings grossly visible by d 21-23. Embryo attached. Invasion begins
23 Placental trophectoderm invasion of endometrium continues. U/S detects embryo
24 Heart beats may be visible on U/S. Palpable 1 cm uterine swellings
25 U/S detection of heart beat with high-resolution equipment
26 Rises in serum relaxin and acute phase proteins (fibrinogen) in some bitches
28 U/S detects zonary placental mass. Relaxin typically detectable. Heart beats clear
30 Palpable, distinct 3 cm uterine swellings. Easy palpation. Prolactin increases
32 Increased prolactin levels detectable
34 Maternal anemia typically evident
36 Palpation yields less-distinct uterine masses. U/S detection of fetal limb buds
38 Embryo still shorter than placental girdle
42 Embryo starts to become longer than placental girdle
46 X-ray first detects skull and spine. Obvious increase in mammary development
50 Acute phase protein levels near peak
54 X-ray may detect limbs and pelvis
56 Teeth still not visible on X-ray
58 X-ray readily detects limbs and pelvis; possibly teeth
60 X-ray readily detects teeth by now or next day. Progesterone above 3 ng/ml
62 Progesterone begins to decline. Nesting, restlessness begins over next 2-4 days
63 Early parturition / short gestation, but not abnormal
64 Early parturition / normal gestation. Progesterone below 2 ng/ml 12-24 h pre-partum
65 Mean parturition date. Predicted whelping date
66 Late parturition / normal range
67 Very late parturition, but not abnormal absent signs of dystocia
68 Over-due if normal signs of nesting and whelping are absent

Major Events of Pregnancy
Some of the major events of pregnancy in the dog include the following, based on previous reviews and
reports [1-8]. Entry of embryo into uterus around Day 11; implantation around Day 22 - 23; secretion of
relaxin by the placenta by Day 24 - 28 and through term; increased secretion of prolactin by Day 30 and
through term and lactation; a physiological nornocyctic anemia evident by Day 30 or 35, and maximal (with
PCV reduced to 30 - 40%) at term; slightly increased secretion of progesterone from Day 30 through term,
probably due to the increase in prolactin secretion (since prolactin is luteotrophic); a simultaneous increase in
metabolism and fecal excretion of progesterone such that serum progesterone concentrations do not rise much
higher than in nonpregnant bitches; an acute pre-partum rise in prostaglandins to luteolytic concentrations and
a resulting rapid decline in progesterone concentrations during the 24 h pre-partum; a corresponding
pre-partum behavior of nesting, digging, social withdrawal, defensiveness, and, also a corresponding drop in
rectal temperature of 1oC ; pre-partum and peri-partum discharge of normal green lochia; delivery (whelping)
of pup(s) with an average litter taking 4 to 24 h.

Timing Events of Pregnancy
The time-course of events of canine pregnancy that have been carefully studied all appear to be relatively
consistent among bitches and predictable when timed correctly. Timing can be accomplished based on the
following, listed in the presumed order of reliability:
(1) the day of the ovulatory LH surge determined by serum LH assay;
(2) the day of the LH surge as estimated by the detection of the concomitant rise in serum progesterone by
radioimmunoassay or sensitive ELISA;
(3) the day of ovulation as estimated by ultrasound;
(4) the day of LH surge and/or day of ovulation based on commercial ELISA progesterone assay;
(5) day of LH surge based on commercial urinary or serum LH assay;
(6) day of LH surge and/or ovulation based on the end-of-estrus (metestrus or diestrus) change in vaginal
cytology;
(7) day of ovulation based on changes in the vaginoscopic appearance of the vaginal mucosa; or,
(8) day of ovulation based on the timing of the pre-ovulatory softening of the vulva and perineum.
Time Course of Gestational Events and Clinical Landmarks
When the day of the preovulatory LH surge has been determined directly or based on progesterone
radioimmunoassay of the initial increase in progesterone in samples collected daily or more frequently, the
sequence of events that has been observed (or estimated) has typically been consistent across studies, and are
reviewed in tables 1 and 2. However there have been some variation and minor differences noted among
studies [typically 1 - 2 days] when studies have been done using a pre-defined, absolute concentration of
progesterone to estimate the time of ovulation. The day of parturition be predicted to be 65 + 1 days after the
estimated day of the preovulatory surge in LH with a reasonable degree of accuracy is effort has been placed
on accurate estimation of the day of the LH surge. The timing of other events are also predictable (Tables 1
and 2).

Impending Parturition and Elective Caesarian Sections
Pre-planned or elective c-sections can probably be performed safely after Day 63 after the LH surge.
However, there are no clinical research reports to this effect and special concern for support of the pups is
important. In other than brachycephalic breeds, waiting until Day 65 or 66 may result in spontaneous delivery
and obviate the need for c-section. In brachycephalic breeds initiation of surgery before natural labor may be
important, although there are no published data on the incidence of problems during natural delivery in these
breeds. Elective and emergency c-section is extremely safe as performed in the United States and Canada [5].
The pup mortality was the same as, or possibly less than, that observed with natural delivery, and bitch
mortality was 1%. The possible value of pre-surgical administration of dexamethasone has not been reported,
but there is anecdotal evidence of its successful use in some practices. The intention is apparently to mimic the
natural rise in corticosteroid that likely occurs at normal parturition. There is also anecdotal evidence that
incidence of prematurity, irregularities of fetal heart rates, and neonatal deaths can be reduced by first
confirming that the bitch is at term by assay of serum progesterone, but no reports have been published. It is
reasonable to suggest that at the time of surgery progesterone should be low, and preferably near or below 2
ng/ml, i.e. at levels expected within 24 h before natural labor. The same ELISA progesterone kits used to
monitor ovulation can be used in this regard.
Serum progesterone is at peak concentration between Days 15 and 30, and may reach peaks as high as 80
ng/ml (240 nmol/L ) or as low as 15 ng/ml (45 nmol/L ). In late gestation, Day 50 - 60, progesterone can be as
high as 15 ng/ml (45 nmol/l ) or as low as 3 ng/ml (9 nmol/L ). Progesterone typically declines from 4 - 5 ng
ml ( 12 - 15 nmol/L) to near or below 2 ng/ml (6 - 7 nmol/L) during the 24 h before the onset of labor. There
is a concurrent pre-partum decline in body temperature which is most readily observed with twice daily or
more frequent rectal temperature measurements started several days before parturition. Many practitioners
routinely have dog owners measure and record rectal temperatures 2 or 3 times a day starting 1 week before
predicted date of whelping.

Managing and Timing Pregnancies When Day of Ovulation is Unknown
The stage of pregnancy can be estimated based on several parameters. In recently bred bitches a vaginal smear
can determine if the transition from estrus to metestrus(diestrus) has occurred. This transition or shift in the
composition of the smear typically occurs 7 - 9 days after the LH surge, and thus about 57 days pre-partum. It
is not entirely accurate in that the metestrus or diestrus shift in the smear can occur as early a Day 6 and as late
as Day 11 (Concannon and Shille, unpublished observation). In early pregnancy, the size of uterine
enlargements palpable per abdomen can be helpful, being typically 1 cm at Day 22 - 24, and 3 cm at Day 32,
post LH surge. Ultrasound studies at know times relative to the LH surge have described several sonographic
landmarks of fetal development that can be used to estimate the stage of gestation when the day of the LH
surge is not known or accurately estimated. [7-10] Using ultrasound, the time of early detection of heart beat
depends on instrumentation, experience and preparation of the abdomen. However they are never delectable
before Day 23 and are likely to be delectable with any instrument by Day 28 - 30. The fetal length in relation
to the length of the placental girdle can be determined by ultrasound and results related to Day 40 - 42, when
the fetus crown-rump length becomes longer than the placental girdle. Details of other ultrasound criteria have
been reported [7-10], including first detection of the fetal limb buds at Day 33 - 35; eyes, kidney and liver at
Day 39 - 47; and intestine at Day 57 - 63. With radiography, the fetal skull is rarely visible before Day 45 and
is almost always visible by Day 47 - 49; pelvic bones are not visible before Day 53 and are usually easily seen
by Day 57; fetal teeth, not before Day 58 and usually by Day 63 [3].
References
1. Concannon PW and Lein DH. Hormonal and clinical correlates of ovarian cycles, ovulation,
pseudopregnancy and pregnancy in dogs. In: Kirk RW, ed. Current Veterinary Therapy, Small Animal
Practice, Vol. X. Philadelphia:W. B. Saunders, 1989: 1269-1282.
2. Concannon PW, McCann JP and Temple M. Biology and endocrinology of ovulation, pregnancy and
parturition in the dog. In: P Concannon, D Morton, and B Weir, eds. Dog and Cat Reproduction,
Contraception and Artificial Insemination, Proceedings of 1st International Symposium on Canine and Feline
Reproduction. J. Reprod. Fert 1989; Suppl. 39:3-25.
3. Concannon P and Rendano V. Radiographic diagnosis of canine pregnancy: onset of fetal skeletal
radiopacity in relation to times of breeding, preovulatory luteinizing hormone release, and parturition. Am J
Vet Res 1983; 44:1506-1511. - PubMed -
4. Concannon P and Verstegen J. Pregnancy in Dogs and Cats. In: Knobil E and Neil JN, eds. Encyclopedia
of Reproduction , Vol. 3. New York: Academic Press, 1998. - Amazon -
5. Moon PF, Erb HN, Ludders JW, Gleed RD, Pascoe PJ. Perioperative management and mortality rates of
dogs undergoing cesarean section in the United States and Canada. J Am Vet Med Assoc 1998;
213:365-369. - PubMed -
6. Thatcher M-JD, Shille V, Buhi WC, Alvarez IM, Concannon PW, Thibeault D, Cotton M. Canine
conceptus appearance and de novo protein synthesis in relation to the time of implantation. Theriogenology
1994; 41:1679-1692.
7. Yeager AE and Concannon PW. Association between the preovulatory luteinizing hormone surge and the
early ultrasonographic detection of pregnancy and fetal heartbeats in beagle dogs. Theriogenology 1990;
34:655-665.
8. Yeager AE, Mohammed HO, Meyers-Wallen VN, Vannerson L. and Concannon PW . Ultrasonographic
appearance of the uterus, placenta, fetus, and fetal membranes throughout accurately timed pregnancy in
beagles. Am J Vet Res 1992; 53:342-351. - PubMed -
9. Yeager AE and Concannon PW . Ultrasonography of the reproductive tract of the female dog and cat. In:
Kirk R and Bonagura J, eds. Current Veterinary Therapy, Vol. 12. Philadelphia: WB Saunders Co, 1995;
1040-1052.
10. Yeager AE and Concannon PW . Ovaries. Uterus. In: Green RW, ed. Small Animal Ultrasound.
Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 1995; 293-303. - Amazon -
All rights reserved. This document is available on-line at wwwivis.org. Document No. A1202.0500 .

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UNDERSTANDING AND MONITORING CANINE PREGNANCY

Background.   The current expectation of breeding management clients includes supplemental services including client education and evaluation of breeding outcome or pregnancy, including pregnancy detection, confirmation of normal gestation, estimation of litter size, and accurate estimation of day of gestation. These all require - as do clinical evaluations of bitches presented for health reasons during suspected or confirmed pregnancy, provision of pregnancy termination service for bitches with unwanted pregnancies, and the management of bitches with a history of pregnancy failure or abnormal pregnancies- a working knowledge of the biology and clinical progress of normal canine pregnancy and of potential important diagnostic and therapeutic modalities applicable to pregnant bitches. The following is a brief review of some of the important elements and issues, albeit excluding dystocia and mammary function.

Timing of Events and Consistent Gestation Length.    Ovulation occurs approximately 48-60 h (2 days) after the preovulatory LH surge. The LH surge (the central critical reproductive event, Day 0) may occur any time from late proestrus to mid-estrus based on observed behavior changes; on average, it is at 1 day after estrus-behavior onset. Gestation length is mistakenly thought to be quite variable because pregnancy can result in intervals from a single mating to partition that range in the extreme from 55 to 68 days; the intervals counting from the first or last of multiple matins can be even longer or shorter, respectively, i.e. 50 or 70 days. Parturition, however, consistently occurs 64-66 days after the preovulatory LH surge in over 95% of normal pregnancies (Concannon, 2003). The discrepancy is due to several phenomena: oocyte maturation does not occur until 2.5 to 3 days after ovulation; the mature oocyte may remain fertile for up to 5-6 days in the extreme, i.e. until 10-11 days after LH surge; sperm may remain fertile for up to 8 days in the female tract; some bitches may abnormally allow mating 5 days before ovulation, others may abnormally refuse to allow mating until 5 days after ovulation; thus, single matings can be fertile from 5 days before ovulation to as late as 8 days after ovulation (i.e., days –3 to + 10 from LH surge). However, the typical bitch has a limited peak fertile period from Day 0 to Day 5 or 6 after the LH surge, with oocytes apparently dying rapidly 1-2 days after oocyte-maturation and with cervical closure occurring between Day 6 and 9 after the LH surge further reducing fertility even when the oocytes retain their viability beyond that time. In cases where sperm are weak or compromised either naturally or due to methodologies of artificial insemination, the fertile period in an individual instance may be limited to a 1-2 days period. Ideally, breeding management techniques will have estimated the time of the LH surge based on one or more parameters including: timing of Day –1 to +1 decreases in vulval and vaginal-mucosal edema; timing of Day 6-9 metestrus/diestrus change in vaginal cytology; and timing of Day-0 rapid preovulatory rise in serum progesterone as well as any acute change in behavior. Such timing can not only provide for accurate prediction of the date of a Day 64-66 parturition, but also permits establishing preferable times for pregnancy testing, for monitoring of normal fetal developmental changes, and of data collection in the monitoring of pregnancies considered high-risk based on prior pregnancy failures.

Implantation.   Permanent apposition of embryonic trophoblast and the uterine implantation-sites occurs around Day 16-18, after a Day 10-11 entry into the uterus and 6-7 days of intra-uterine and trans-cornual migration of blastocysts. Actual implantation by trophobast-cell invasion is estimated to occur at Day 21.

Landmark Events Assessed By Ultrasound.   Using 5-7 MHz ultrasonographic (U/S) equipment, fluid filled pregnancy-associated uterine vesicles may be obvious at 1-2 mm diameter as early as day 18-20 but may not be clear until 3 mm diameter at day 21. The fetal mass within the vesicle may be visible by day 20-21, but may not be clear until Day 23. The beating fetal heart may be seen as a distinct flickering by day 23-24, but may not be easily detected until day 25. U/S equipment of greater or lesser resolution may detect these and other landmark states or events earlier or later, respectively. Changes in embryo diameter, crown rump length, biparietal head diameter, and other parameters have been well characterized, at least for research dogs. These data have also been successfully applied to estimating gestational age clinically on many breeds based on U/S exam findings, and considering a 0-2 day error depending on the size of the animal and other factors (Kutzler et al, 2003). Relational, non-quantitative changes may be more precise and less breed or animal dependent: e.g., the time when the fetal crown-rump length first exceeds the length of the placental girdle in research beagles (Day 39-41) is likely the same in most or all other breeds. U/S appearances of the developing fetus and pregnant uterus, and estimated times of a large number events of canine pregnancy are readily accessible (England and Yeager, 2003, in Concannon et al, 2005 on IVIS (wwwivis.org). Canine placentation is endothelial-chorial; the girdle of fetal trophoblast tissue that forms the zonary placenta and develops marginal hematomas is distinct in U/S exams after day 28. The chorioallantoic poles remain thin and transparent. The marginal hematomas develop large pools of stagnant blood from which the extra-embryonic circulation absorbs metabolites and iron. Fetal heart rate (HR), typically >220, averages about 230 bpm and can be routinely monitored by most U/S equipment after Day 28. 

Pregnancy Diagnosis.   The earliest reliable and definitive method is U/S detection of fetal heartbeats, typically visible by Day 25. Examination is best scheduled for Day 28-30, which allows for 1-2 d. error in estimation of the day of the LH surge, differences in U/S equipment, and differences among bitches in the ease with which the uterus can be imaged; exams scheduled based on mating if negative times should be repeated 1 week later. Scanning with bitches in dorsal recumbence yields better images but by Day 28 scanning of the standing bitch should be sufficient. The details of the U/S appearance of the uterus, embryo, and fetal components are available at wwwivis.org (see England and Yeager, 2003 in Concannon et al 2005). Manual palpation of 1 cm diameter uterine vesicles of the standing bitch around day 22 can often detect pregnancy as early if not earlier than U/S but with less assurance. In smaller dogs, palpation of uterine swellings cause by embryonic vesicles can be done by allowing the abdominal contents between the kidneys and bladder to slowly pass between the tips of the thumb and forefinger by gentle, slow, repeated “grasping” of the entire dorsal abdomen with one hand and drawing the fingers down ventrally until the uterine horns become obvious and palpable along their length; with larger dogs, use a similar compression of abdomen in the same motion but using opposing the finger tips of both hands. Larger, 2.5 – 3.5 cm vesicles are more readily detected by palpation between days 30 and 34, perhaps starting at Day 28 if the concern is one of detecting an unwanted pregnancy as most abortifacient methods are best performed early after pregnancy confirmation. Radiography is of little use, in that the fetal skeletal is not distinct until at or after Day 44-45. Commercial canine relaxin assay is a reliable and specific method for pregnancy diagnosis; it may be positive as early as Day 23-25 but anecdotally seems to be more reliable and to have fewer false- negative results after Day 30. Progesterone assay is not useful for pregnancy diagnosis but can be usful at this time.

Endocrine Changes and Progesterone Assays.   Progesterone concentrations increase throughout estrus, peak at 15-90 ng/ml some time between Day 15 and 25, and slowly decline thereafter, in both pregnancy and non-pregnant bitches. Progesterone assessment around Day 30 can be useful; in the absence of a positive pregnancy diagnosis, progesterone can confirm whether or not the bitches failed to ovulate or to normal luteal function; progesterone can detect the possible onset of luteal insufficiency in pregnant bitches that had prior pregnancy losses associated with low progesterone levels. In such problem cases, progesterone assays at 5-7 days intervals can be useful in monitoring the pregnancy; values above 5 ng/ml are assuring to some extent; those below 4-5 ng/ml any time prior to day 55 may indicate luteal insufficiency. Such insufficiency is difficult to define; research bitches have maintained normal pregnancies despite spontaneous or drug-induced declines in progesterone to or near non-detectable levels for several days; anecdotally, some clinical cases with progesterone at 2-3 ng/ml at day 50 have produced normal litters in the absence of treatment while others have not.

In non-pregnant bitches progesterone declines to under 1 ng/ml some time between Days 55 and 90, often between Days 60 and 70. In pregnancy, progesterone typically remains distinctly elevated above 3-5 ng/ml until Day 62-63 and 1-3 days prepartum, at which time the mechanism of parturition causes a luteolytic rise in plasma prostrglandin-F2alpha (PGF) and a decline in progesterone to < 1-2 ng/ml. Progesterone assays can be also used in late gestation to help determine the timing of elective c’sections in pregnancies where Day 0 was not determined with sufficient accuracy (e.g., waiting no longer than when progesterone declines to 2 ng/ml or undergoes an abrupt decline to 2-3 ng/ml over a 24-36 hr period). Estrogen assays are of little value, in that many assays have limited application to canine samples; levels are variable and provide no useful information not available otherwise. Relaxin levels in the bitch increase between Day 27 and 30, peak by Day 40-50, are elevated but declining towards term, and fall at parturition to reach non-detectable levels within 1-6 weeks. Relaxin assays could be a means to monitor placental function and pregnancy beyond initial pregnancy detection, but the magnitude of decline that would warrant intervention is not known. Pregnancy termination could be followed by some secretion of relaxin for a week or more if some placental tissue is retained, as may occur postpartum Relaxin in dogs is mainly or entirely of placental origin; detectable relaxin postpartum is presumably due to retained placental (trophoblast) tissue. Prolactin. PRL concentrators increase above those in most non-pregnant bitches at or shortly before day 30; whether or not the increase is in response to the pregnancy specific elevation in relaxin is not known. PRL concentrations peak near term, and are as high or higher during much of lactation, following a transient postpartum decline. PRL elevations are not pregnancy specific because they can also occur in no pregnant bitches showing symptoms of overt (clinical) pesudopregnancy. Pregnancy causes insulin resistance, possibly more so than the nonpregnant luteal phase; insulin requirements of diabetic bitches become increased, and pre-diabetic bitches may become hyperglycemic.

Pregnancy Maintenance and Termination.   The only hormone required to maintain pregnancy in dogs is progesterone, based on pregnancies so maintained in ovariectomized bitches. Normal estrogen concentrations may however be important for full mammary development and lactation. The only source of progesterone in dogs is ovarian (corpora luteal). Pregnancy specific increases in ovarian progesterone secretion from Day 30 to near-term are not obvious in plasma levels because of increased hemo-dilution and increased metabolism by the uterus, placenta and mammary; however, they normally ensure that peripheral concentrations are maintained at or above the minimum required for pregnancy maintenance. Luteal progesterone production requires both LH and prolactin; at any time suppression of either hormone diminishes or terminates progesterone secretion. Administration of an anti-progestin (e.g., aglepristone, 10 mg/kg/d for 2 days) is the preferred mode of pregnancy termination where available and affordable, as it is effective without side effects at any time. PGF (30-50 ug/kg, b.i.d. or t.i.d.) or PGF-agonist (Cloprostenol 2.5 ug/kg, every 48 hours) formulations after day 25 are luteolytic and abortifacient when given “to effect” as confirmed by ultrasound. Dopamine agonists such as bromocriptine (100ug/kg q.d. or b.i.d, to effect) or cabergoline (5 ug/kg/d, to effect) given orally after day 30 can cause complete luteolysis and terminate pregnancy but are more effective in combination with low-moderate doses of PGF. Dexamethasone (0.2 mg/kg, b.i.d., p.o.) for 9.5 days or longer also terminates canine pregnancy after day 30; however, the immunosuppressive doses also cause adrenal suppression for 2-3 weeks in otherwise healthy bitches.

Altered Clinical Parameters.   Hematocrits normally decline after Day 25, are typically below 40 in late gestation and may reach values as low as 31 at term; normal non-pregnant values are not re-attained until 1.5 to 3 months post partum; This physiological, normo-chromic normocyctic anemia appears primarily due to increased plasma volume; it potentially facilitates circulation through placental vessels. As in humans there is also likely to be an associated but normal thrombocytopenia and decreases in albumin, total protein, oncotic pressure, and total calcium in plasma. Plasma concentrations of the hepatic acute phase proteins (APP) fibrinogen and c-reactive protein increase following implantation, are evident by Day 30, peak at Day 45-55, decrease but remain elevated to term, and decline rapidly to normal post-partum. The APP increases are distinct despite the concurrent dilution effect of increased plasma volume; although not truly pregnancy specific, they have been used as the basis of marketed canine pregnancy tests. Elevated APP levels are seen in most instances of inflammatory disease and those in pregnancy may represent a similar response to placentation. The induced increase in fibrinogen is compensated by a simultaneous increase in local finbrinolytic activity as reflected in increased serum fibrinogen degradation products. A 40 percent average increase in food consumption accompanies a 20 to 55 percent increase in body weight, and requires corresponding increased food supply. Calcium or vitamin D supplementation is contraindicated it can complicate normal calcium regulation and increase the increase risk of peripartum hypocalcaemia

Resorptions and Abortions.   Spontaneous resorption of partial or entire litters can occur with little or no evidence or side effects between days 28 and 36 in apparently healthy and otherwise normal pregnant bitches, as shown in several U/S studies. Resorptions and abortions after day 36 with some related vaginal discharges can occur without detection when bitches lick away or ingest discharged materials. Resorption of one or more consceptuses likely occurs in 10-15 % of pregnancies. Many instances of resorption are proceeded by early embryonic development retarded in relation to the expected time course. U/S exams for pregnancy diagnosis performed by day 28 can therefore clarify the situation in bitches that resorb entire litters but would otherwise be presumed to have failed to become pregnant. Any relationship to delayed breeding time, stress, or uterine status is not known. Gross abortions after day 40 are less common and morel likely to represent disease or infection, and merit evaluation of brucella, herpesvirus, or other suspected agents. Abortion may be accompanied by a large decline in progesterone, and absent other obvious causes, insufficient luteal function has been suspected or assumed. Whether low progesterone is a primary cause or simply a consequence of the abortion in any individual case is difficult to determine. While not well documented, abortion due to a non-endocrine cause would be expected to result in a decline in progesterone due to a loss of the gestational stimulus for increased prolactin and its luteotrophic effects; and, due to a uterine release of PGF. Documentation of insufficient luteal function would require detection of decreased progesterone prior to the pregnancy loss. Anecdotally, progesterone supplementation has been “successful” in pregnancies in bitches that previously failed to maintain pregnancy

Progesterone Supplementation. Supplementation can be considered in previously problematic bitches if progesterone falls below 5 ng/ml before day 55 or declines more rapidly than expected in mid-gestation. Some progestins are inappropriate (e.g., medroxyprogesterone and megestrol can cause masculinization of female fetuses). Progesterone supplementation protocols have included the following: (1) progesterone in oil, i.m., 2 mg/kg, every 72 h. (2) altrenogest, daily, p.o., 0.088 mg/kg (0.2 cc/10 lb using Regumate ©, Hoechst-Roussel). Micronized natural progesterone marketed in capsules for humans has be given orally 1-2 times per day at doses of 5-10 mg/kg (i.e., 100 mg capsules in 10-20 kg dogs) and the efficacy monitored by progesterone assays. Natural progesterone requires frequent administration but has the advantage that withdrawal can be done rapidly. Whether reported successes have been incidental or the result of treatment is not known. Therapy must be discontinued to permit or promote normal whelping. Excessive exogenous progesterone or other progestin can compromise normal parturition and can result in dead puppies that must be recovered by c’section. Oral progestin therapy should be discontinued 2 days prior to the estimated day of parturition. Serial injections of synthetic preparations should be discontinued early enough for the progestin to decline to non-effective concentrations by the expected day of parturition. A mistimed or long-acting treatment can potentially be overcome by administration of otherwise abortifacient doses (or higher doses) of an antiprogestin, where available.

Normal parturition.   As in other species it appears that near-term fetal maturation, including hypothalamic changes in CRF and other peptides, pituitary ACTH secretion, and fetal-adrenal steroidogenesis results in a surge in corticosteroid activity that initiates the rapid positive feedback mechanism for parturition. Unlike in many species, there is no large increase in estrogen pre-term, and as in primates the cortisol may act to stimulate endometrial and placental production of PGF and release, possibly by acting locally as a progesterone antagonist. Elevated PGF has direct luteolytic effects causing an abrupt decline in progesterone that in turn increases the extent of utero/placental PGF release and consequently a more accelerated luteolysis and decline in progesterone. PGF stimulates uterine contraction. Declining progesterone causes placental separation and increases myopmetrial sensitivities to PGF and to oxytocin. Uterine contractions and fetal impingement on the cervix stimulate oxytocin secretion. The initial sharp decline in progesterone from 5-10 ng/ml to 2-3 ng/ml is associate d with stage 1 labor (vocalization, nesting behavior); stage 2 labors occur following the continued progesterone decline below 2 ng/ml. Normal intervals between pups can range from 20 min to 4 h or more. The prepartum decline in progesterone is presumably the cause of the acute rise in prolactin immediately prepartum. It also dis-inhibits the suppressive effects of progesterone on lactation and thus initiates lactation. And, it terminates ongoing hyperthemric effects of elevated progesterone on hypothalamic thermoregulation, causing an acute, transient hypothermia. Temperature declines 1oC or more during the 12-24 h prepartum. Rectal temperature can be monitored twice daily starting at estimated Day 60 by owners who wish to be involved.

Fetal Viability.   Fetal HR can be variable but should remain above 200. U/S detection of fetal HR below 180 is indicative of fetal distress, is often accompanied by fetal bowel movements, and can be the basis of elective intervention in near-term bitches. U/S can also reveal fetal overgrowth or growth retardation, and other abnormalities including hydrocephalus, fetal anasarca, herniation of the ventral abdominal wall. Such cases can then benefit form intervention. Uterine contraction activity has also been monitored with commercial devices designed for that purpose. Monitoring of fetal and uterine activity near term in conjunction with interventive c’sections when indicated resulted in a decline neonatal mortality from 9 to 3 % of pups in one study. There are no confirmed markers of placental function; relaxin tends to decline in late gestation and is only a qualitative and not a quantitative marker of placental function.

Interventions.   These can include planned c’sections (e.g., in brachycephalic breeds), therapeutic c’sections in response to fetal distress, prolonged gestation or maternal dystocia, and potentially antiprogestin-induced parturition. Election of c’section may involve a brachycephalic breed with history of dystocia, or a bitch with over-grown fetuses, a history of dystocia, or excessive early neonatal loss of pups. In the absence of signs of dystocia, prolonged gestation should not be presumed based on breeding records alone. Monitoring and/or examining for the expected prepartum decline in progesterone can be an important tool in managing possibly-prolonged gestation and in timing elective c’sections, especially in bitches in which the day of day of the preovulatory LH surge was not estimated with accuracy. Recent and ongoing clinical studies suggest that the outcome of c’sections can be improved by providing bitches access to 100% oxygen gas before as well as during surgery to improve fetal surfactant and decrease neonatal anoxia, regardless of whether the primary anesthesia is via injection or gas; O2 can be provided first by mask and then by intubation. Many clinics routinely administer shock-management doses of corticosteroid (e.g., dexamethasone) 8-24 h prior to elective c’section and pre-surgery in cases warranting immediate intervention; the steroid functions to enhance or induce lung surfactant production and cardio-pulmonary and other maturational changes associated with the mechanisms of normal parturition. A parturition-inducing regimen of the antiprogestin aglepristone (15 mg/kg) and after 4 h serial administrations of oxytocin was effective; parturitions lasting 5+2 h began 32+4 h after the antiprogestin injection; neonatal survival rates were normal. Whether such methodology has a role in otherwise normally progressing pregnancies is unclear; it could presumably pre-determine delivery times to occur at a time most convenient for monitoring labor and neonatal status.

Patrick W. Concannon. Ph.D., Dipl. ACT (Hon.)
Department of Biomedical Sciences, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853 USA
Web Page

References:
Concannon, P.W. Canine Pregnancy: Predicting Parturition and Timing Events of Gestation. In: Concannon P.W., England G., Verstegen III J., et al. (Eds.), Recent Advances in Small Animal Reproduction. Ithaca: International Veterinary Information Service (wwwivis.org), 2000; Document No. A1202.0500.
Concannon P.W., England G., Verstegen J., Linde-Forsberg, C. (Eds.) Recent Advances in Small Animal Reproduction, Ithaca: International Veterinary Information Service (wwwivis.org), 2005; A1203.0703
Concannon, P. Tsutsui, T., and Shille, V. Embryo development, hormonal requirements, and maternal responses during canine pregnancy. J Reprod Fertil Suppl, 2001; 57:169-179.
Concannon P, England G, Farsytad W, Linde-Forsberg C, Verstegen J, Doberska C (eds). Advances in Reproduction in Dogs, Cats and Exotic Carnivores. J Reprod Fert Suppl, 2001; 57
Fieni, F. The use of anti-progestins in the control of reproduction. (Abstract) Proc. 3rd EVSSAR Congr. Reprod. Compan. Exotic Lab. Animals, 2002, Liege
Kutzler MA, Yeager AE, Mohammed HO, Meyers-Wallen VN. Accuracy of canine parturition date prediction using fetal measurements obtained by ultrasonography. Theriogenology, 2003; 60(7):1309-17
Luz, MR, Bertan, CM, Binelli, M, and Lopes, MD. In vitro prostaglandin f2 alpha production from endometrium, corpus luteum and placenta explants of bitches. (Abstract) Abstracts Book 5th Intl. Symp. Canine Feline Reproduction, 2004, Sao Paulo.

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Breeding, Whelping, and Rearing Puppies
http://www.k9web.com/dog-faqs/medical/whelping.html

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Руководство по репродукции и неонатологии собак и кошек
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