After a mare is bred, waiting to
determine if the mare returns to heat before having her examined for pregnancy
may appear to be a way to save money by avoiding "needless" pregnancy
evaluations, but may ultimately result in greater costs. The use of ultrasound
enables us to diagnose pregnancy at an early stage, 12 to 14 days after ovulation.
Ovulation usually occurs approximately one day before the mare goes out of
heat. The advantages of early pregnancy diagnosis are numerous, whereas the
disadvantages are negligible. In this article the principle reasons why early
pregnancy examinations are so important to a well-managed breeding program will
be discussed.
By knowing that a mare is not pregnant
before the time she is due to come back into heat, plans can be made to prepare
for another breeding. Although the length of time a mare is in estrus or
"heat" varies somewhat between mares and according to the time of the
year, the length of time a mare is out of heat is fairly consistent,
approximately 15 days. By checking a mare for pregnancy two weeks after she
goes out of heat, if she is not pregnant, plans can be made to either take her
back to the stallion for rebreeding or prepare for another shipment of semen
for artificial insemination. This time frame allows for arrangements to be made
before she comes back into heat, thereby providing ample time so that
the next cycle is not missed and valuable time is not lost. This advanced
warning is also helpful to the manager of the stallion who may need to work the
mare into the breeding schedule. If pregnancy examination is delayed until 18
or 21 days after breeding, the mare may be too close to ovulation (or even just
past ovulation) for rebreeding during that cycle.
Because the length of time between
heats is fairly consistent, if a mare is showing strong signs of heat at the
time of pregnancy examination 12 to 14 days after the last breeding, it is an
indication of some problem causing her to "short cycle." Short
cycling, or coming back into heat before expected, may result from a uterine
infection. Uterine infections cause the release of a hormone, prostaglandin,
that results in a mare returning to estrus. This will result in her having a
shorter than normal interval between estrus periods. Mares that come back into
heat before they are due should be examined for abnormal conditions of the
reproductive tract, including poor conformation, urine pooling, and endometritis,
which could be responsible for the abbreviated diestrus. Likewise, examination
for pregnancy in late diestrus may reveal fluid in the uterus, another abnormal
condition that should be further evaluated.
Article provided by Louisiana State University Equine Veterinary Research Program;
Early Ultrasound Pregnancy Examination Is Critical to Sound
Breeding Program
Written by: Dale Paccamonti, DVM, MS Diplomate, American College of Theriogenologists, Associate Professor of Theriogenology
View the entire article at http://evrp.lsu.edu/06pregus.htm
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