Term
Which of the following is NOT a tool used in routine breeding management of the mare?
Transrectal palpation
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Transrectal ultrasound
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Progesterone assays
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Behavioral monitoring (teasing)
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Definition
Answer: Progesterone assays
Progesterone assays may be used on a very limited level, usually when there is a question of the mare still being in the vernal transition or if the CL function is suspect. Progesterone assays are not used in routine breeding management, whereas the other three tools are used on many mares most days they are evaluated. |
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Term
Which of the following is NOT a useful indicator of when a mare might ovulate naturally?
Size of the follicle
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Shape of the follicle
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Texture of the follicle
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Uterine edema
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Serum progesterone concentrations
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Definition
Answer: Serum progesterone concentrations
Usually follicles are between 40 and 50 mm, and almost always bigger than 35 (almost always). The shape of the follicle changes as it is in the process of ovulating. The follicle becomes softer as it gets closer to ovulation. Uterine edema generally decreases the day prior to ovulation.
BUT Serum progesterone does not rise until AFTER ovulation in the mare. |
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Term
Which of the following drugs is useful in inducing ovulation in the mare?
PGF
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deslorelin
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cabergoline
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PRL
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oxytocin
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Definition
Answer: deslorelin
Deslorelin acts as a GnRH analogue, causing the release of LH, which causes ovulation. |
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Term
Human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) is a(n) _______________________ analog. |
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Definition
Answer: HCG is a LH analog
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Term
Which drug can be used to short-cycle a mare?
PGF 2-alpha
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Deslorelin acetate
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hCG
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Cabergoline
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Oxytocin
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Definition
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Term
Which treatment is the most predictable and practical in getting mares to cycle early in the breeding season?
GnRH agonists
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Altrenogest
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Dopamine antagonists
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Lighting regimens
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Definition
Answer: Lighting regimens
Lighting is the one that has the best predictability and practicality. These other drugs aim at shortening the transition, but either are cumbersome or not very predictable in their efficacy. |
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Term
How do lighting regimens most predictable/practical method work to get mares cycling early in the season?
Shortens the vernal transition period
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Shifts the vernal transition period
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Circumvents the vernal transition period
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Suppresses the vernal transition
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Definition
Answer: Shifts the vernal transition period
Lighting takes the transitional period and starts it sooner by mimicking the natural effects of the sun. |
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Term
Name the hormone that has the most dramatic effect on reproductive behavior in the mare. |
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Definition
Answer: Progesterone
Estrogen does enhance/encourage the display of receptive behaviors in the mare, but is often unnecessary. Progesterone has a profound inhibitory effect on reproductive receptivity in the mare and simply the absence of progesterone is enough in some mares to encourage receptivity. |
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Term
What is the earliest, most effective, least expensive way to diagnose twins in the mare? |
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Definition
Transrectal ultrasound
There are no hormone assays to detect twins. Palpation can indeed detect twins, but only after about 25 days of gestation and the sensitivity is much lower than using ultrasound, both because feeling the bulge in the uterus at that stage can be difficult, especially for a novice, and detecting that there are 2 bulges instead of one if the embryos are right next to each other (which they are about 70% of the time) can be very difficult, even for the experienced practitioner. Ultrasound, on the other hand, can very reliably detect twins by 13-15 days gestation. With regard to palpation being less expensive than ultrasound, given the lower efficacy of palpation I just explained, I would ask the rhetorical question of how much less expensive is palpation if you are wrong and are stuck later with twins? The cost to reduce one twin, the lack of success you can expect, and the resultant economic loss on the entire season dwarf the $25 you might have saved the client by only palpating instead of also scanning the mare with ultrasound. |
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Term
What is the earliest stage of pregnancy (days after ovulation) in the mare that pregnancy can be detected via palpation per rectum? |
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Definition
18-21 days
It is true that a pregnant uterus will have very good tone and a closed cervix at 14-16 days of gestation, but so will a non-pregnant uterus because it is still in diestrus at that stage. And if the mare is pregnant, you will not be able to feel the embryonic vesicle at 14-16 days. By 18-21 days, a non-pregnant mare should be returning to (or already in) estrus. The consequent uterus of a non-pregnant, estrous mare will be more flaccid and the cervix will be open. This is in contrast to the pregnant mare at 18-21 days that, even though you still cannot palpate the actual pregnancy, will still have excellent uterine tone and a toned, closed cervix. Therefore, 18-21 days is the correct answer. I have also, however, given credit for 25-30 days, because this is the stage that you can first actually palpate the bulge in the uterus created by the fluid surrounding the embryo. |
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Term
What is the purpose of the equine embryo moving inside the mare's uterus during the first couple weeks of gestation? |
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Definition
Answer: Signal its presence to the mare
As discussed both today and last week, the embryo signals its presence to the mare by making contact with multiple sites along the endometrial surface between when it drops into the uterus at 5.5 days of gestation and 16 days of gestation, when it fixes in place. |
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Term
What day do the endometrial cups form after ovulation? |
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Definition
Answer: 37-38 days
As stated in the lecture, and in the reading, endometrial cups form from trophoblastic cells from the embryo that invade the endometrium and form the endometrial cups. This happens around days 37 to 38 of gestation. The reading did mention that at day 25 "a specialized annular band of the trophoblast undergoes cellular changes to form the chorionic girdle." It then goes on to explain that these cells go on to form the endometrial cups at day 38. |
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Term
Which of the following is NOT a routine component of a mare breeding soundness evaluation?
Uterine cytology
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Uterine culture
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Uterine biopsy
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Ovarian stimulation test
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Vaginal speculum examination
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Definition
Answer: Ovarian stimulation test |
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Term
When should you recommend always first checking for pregnancy in a mare (days after ovulation)?
10-12
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13-15
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17-19
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25-28
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37-38
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Definition
Answer: 13-15 days
Evaluating at 10-12 days risks missing the pregnancy or the presence of a twin. Also, if twins are present, it is too early to crush then at 10-12 days. Anytime after 16 days you risk that if there are twins they will have fixed right next to each other and make reduction by crushing very difficult. |
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Term
An endometrial biopsy you submitted has been evaluated and the pathologist reports moderate periglandular fibrosis and scattered foci of inflammation. The pathologist describes the mare as being a Category IIB. What percent chance do you currently give this mare of conceiving and carrying a foal to term? Give the range that was presented in the reading. |
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Definition
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Term
Which of the following is NOT a common pathogen affecting fertility in the mare's reproductive tract?
Pasteurella multocida
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Escherichia coli
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Pseudomonas aeruginosa
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Klebsiella pneumoniae
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Streptococcus zooepidemicus equii
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Definition
Answer: Pasteurella multocida
While many bacteria may potentially cause an infection, the four bacteria listed (excluding Pasteurella) make up 80% of confirmed cases of endometritis in mares. |
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Term
Which of the following treatments for endometritis in the mare has been shown scientifically to have a positive effect on subsequent pregnancy rates?
Intrauterine antibiotic infusion
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Intrauterine plasma infusion
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Chemical uterine curettage
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Intrauterine colostrum infusion
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Exogenous estrogen treatment
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|
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Definition
Intrauterine antibiotic infusion
All of the options given were mentioned as treatments used in mares with endometritis, but none of them, except for antibiotic infusion, have been tested, or they have been tested and have yielded conflicting results. |
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Term
It is late May and a client presents with a mare for a pregnancy evaluation. You have never seen this mare before and the breeding date is uncertain (pasture breeding). In your evaluation, you determine that the mare is likely 65 days pregnant, and you find two viable twins, separated, one at the base of each horn. What is your best option to recommend to the owner?
Give prostaglandin to abort the pregnancy, rebreed the mare, and check for pregnancy at 2 weeks gestation next time.
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Crush one of the twins.
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Use transvaginal, ultrasound-guided aspiration to reduce one of the twins.
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Do a colpotomy and use craniocervical dislocation to reduce one of the twins.
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Wait a few weeks and if both are still alive, do transabdominal, ultrasound-guided intracardiac infusion of potassium penicillin into a twin.
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Use benign neglect and monitor the pregnancy for problems for now.
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Definition
Answer: Do a colpotomy and use craniocervial dislocation to reduce one of the twins.
All of the options mentioned, for the most part, could be responsible decisions at different stages of gestation. Prostaglandin will only work effectively to permanently lyse the CL before the formation of the endometrial cups (38 days gestation). A twin may only be crushed effectively up until about 30 days gestation, and only then if each twin is in a separate horn. Transvaginally guided aspiration of a twin works effectively up until about 55 days of gestation. After that, the fetus is usually too large to manipulate for this procedure. You could wait and do the intracardiac infusion, but that procedure has a 50% success and the craniocervical dislocation has a 65% success. Using benign neglect at this stage does not gain you any real advantage. It is very unlikely that a twin will die spontaneously within a few weeks at this late stage. Better to be proactive and do something while you still can and give the remaining twin the best chance possible. |
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Term
What are the positive male signs for a fetus? |
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Definition
the positive male sign (the hyperechoic genital tubercle just caudal to the umbilicus) |
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Term
What are the negative female signs for a fetus? |
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Definition
negative female view (with the hyperechoic triangle of spots making up the tail-head and two hind hocks) |
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Term
As part of a breeding soundness evaluation, you submit a uterine biopsy specimen and a few days later receive the following report:
"Sections of uterus have widely scattered clusters of uterine glands surrounded by 1-3 concentric rings of fibrous connective tissue. Moderate numbers of glands are moderately dilated and surrounded by 1-2 concentric layers of fibrosis. Widely-scattered uterine glands are surrounded by mild to focally moderate infiltrates of lymphocytes and plasma cells. Moderate numbers of lymphatics were moderately dilated.
Conclusions: Mild, nonsuppurative endometritis with moderate, multifocal periglandular fibrosis, cystic glandular dilation and lymphatic lacunae.
Comments: This uterus was classified as a grade IIB."
choose BOTH a prognosis for this mare AND a recommendation for treatment. |
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Definition
Answer: 10-50% chance of conceiving and carrying a foal to term
The mare needs to be treated and have special breeding management in order to conceive and carry a foal to term.
This mare has all three problems we discussed in class: periglandular fibrosis, inflammation, and lymphatic lacunae. The fibrosis is an irreversible change, and cannot be treated. But the inflammation is quite likely due to bacterial infection and, if so, would respond to treatment with antibiotics. The lymphatic lacunae cannot be fixed, but special breeding management decisions focusing on when to breed, using uterine lavage, and administering ecbolic agents would help treat the clinical signs, if not the underlying condition. These clinical decisions could raise the probability of this mare carrying a foal to term. |
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Term
What is the most important (#1) cause of reproductive losses in mares? |
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Definition
Bacterial Infection
Twinning used to be the #1 cause prior to the advent of ultrasound as a tool in equine reproduction. It is still the top noninfectious cause, but the overall most important cause is bacterial infection, leading to either endometritis or placentitis. |
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Term
What is a causative agent of an equine venereal sexually transmitted disease? |
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Definition
Taylorella equigenitalis
Equine herpesviruses and influenza virus are transmitted via the aerosol route. E. coli is an environmental opportunistic infection. West Nile virus is mosquito-borne. Brucella equus and EIV are fictional. The only true venereal pathogen on this list is T. equigenitalis. |
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Term
You have an 11 year-old Paso Fino mare who was barren last year, despite multiple breedings. She was confirmed pregnant twice, but lost the pregnancies early in gestation. This year, you have performed an endometrial culture and the results were a moderate, pure growth of Klebsiella pneumoniae, sensitive to gentamicin. You started treatment with intrauterine gentamicin 6 days ago and treated for 3 days. On the 4th day, the mare was bred and given deslorelin. The day after breeding, the mare received another treatment of gentamicin. On day 6 (today), ovulation was noted. How many more days of treatment would you give of the antibiotics?
No more treatments are indicated.
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Today, day 6, should be the last one.
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Day 7 should be the last one.
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Day 8 should be the last one.
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Day 9 should be the last one.
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Day 10 should be the last one.
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Definition
Answer: Day 8 (but day 6-9 was ok)
Different decisions could certainly be made and defended for this situation. If you use what was taught to you either in lecture or from the reading, you will remember that I said I generally treat mares at least for 4 days, and up to 6 or 7 days, depending on the severity of the infection. The chapter from the reading advises to treat for 3 days for mild infections (based on endometrial biopsy), 5 days for moderate infections, and 7 days for severe infections. I would argue that this mare has a significant (severe?) infection based chiefly on her history and the pure growth of bacteria. One might argue that it is only moderate, based solely on the description of the bacterial growth as "moderate." I think this is a narrow interpretation and that whole clinical picture should be considered. You would also need to remember that the upper limit of time after ovulation that you can treat with intrauterine antibiotics is usually 2 days, but both I and the reading allowed for up to 3 days. 5 days treatment would have been day 6 in this example, 7 days would have been day 8, and 3 days after ovulation would have been day 9. I allowed for any answer between 6 and 9 days. In practice, I would have chosen day 8 because I think this infection is serious, as described to you, with the history of repeated pregnancy loss and the pure growth of a known reproductive pathogen. And I do not like to push it to 3 days unless I haven't gotten the number of treatments in I think we need. |
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Term
Considering the same mare on the same cycle as in question #1, and using ovulation as the new Day 0, you check this mare for pregnancy at 14 days and find a 20 mm embryonic vesicle, but you do not see a visible CL and there is a mild amount of uterine edema (1 out of 3). You start the mare on altrenogest and oral antibiotics for a few days. On day 18, you submit a serum sample for progesterone and it comes back as 0.49 ng/mL (normal range for a pregnant mare is > 4.0 ng/mL). How long would you supplement with altrenogest before checking her serum progesterone concentrations again?
There is no need to further test the serum progesterone. This mare needs to be on altrenogest until she foals.
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You cannot test the serum progesterone as long as the mare is on altrenogest (cross-reactivity).
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Test again at gestational day 28.
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Test again at gestational day 37.
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Test again at gestational day 48.
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Test again at gestational day 90.
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Definition
Answer: Test again on gestational day 48
Altrenogest is given as a daily, oral supplement and gloves must be worn to administer the product to avoid absorption through your skin. It also becomes expensive after 11 months. For these reasons, if we do not need to administer altrenogest, we would rather not do it. So, if we can test the mare to determine the necessity, that is good. And we can. Altrenogest does not (as I said in class) cross-react with progesterone and so assays may be run while the mare is on treatment (this is not true for progesterone in oil, which will cross-react). So then the question is when to next test, if the first test was performed at day 18. By day 18 a non-pregnant mare (or a mare who did not have successful maternal recognition of pregnancy) would have lysed the primary CL and progesterone would be baseline. A pregnant mare who had successful maternal recognition of pregnancy would have elevated progesterone concentrations. This mare was pregnant, but had baseline concentrations. This indicates that the primary CL is not functioning. We will need to maintain the pregnancy with altrenogest for now. But at 37-38 days the endometrial cups will form and begin to secrete eCG, which will cause follicular growth and luteinization. It will take some days for this to happen, but when it does, progesterone will be supplied by the secondary (accessory) CL's until the fetomaternal unit takes over around 100 days gestation to produce 5-alpha pregnanes. So, testing this mare again at day 28 would be useless because nothing would have changed from the test at day 18. Testing this mare at 37 days is a nice thought because that's when the endometrial cups form, but do you think the progesterone immediately shoots up? No. First eCG must stimulate follicular growth and luteinization. That takes some days to happen. How about 11 days? Day 48? Yes. Progesterone should be elevated before then, certainly by then. Waiting to day 90 is just wasting time. |
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Term
Are most equine twins thought to be monozygotic or dizygotic? |
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Definition
Dizygotic
While there is documentation of some monozygotic twinning in mares, dizygotic twins are much more common and part of the reason why we do not recommend checking for twins routinely earlier than 13 days gestation; in the case of asynchronous ovulations, one of the twins may be too small to easily detect. |
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Term
What has been shown to be the primary causative agent of Mare Reproductive Loss Syndrome (MRLS)?
Escherichia coli
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Streptococcus zooepidemicus equi
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Klebsiella pneumoniae
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Taylorella equigenitalis
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Pseudomonas aeruginosa
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Equine Herpesvirus 1
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Equine viral arteritis virus
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Eastern Tent Caterpillars
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Garden slugs
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Mosquito-borne pathogen
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Chokecherry ingestion (cyanide toxicity)
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Oak leaf ingestion (tannin toxicity)
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|
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Definition
|
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Term
|
Definition
Ascending placentitis is evident
The area at the base of the "F" is pale or avillous. This indicates separation from the endometrium, indicating placentitis. Because this is the area that is next to the cervix, the most likely etiology is an ascending placentitis. The cervical star would appear as a radiating pattern, not this diffuse pattern with relatively smooth borders. |
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Term
In a foaling mare, how long after stage II labor is complete should the fetal membranes be shed?
30 minutes
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3 hours
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6 hours
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12 hours
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24 hours
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Definition
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Term
An 8 year-old, pregnant Appaloosa brood mare presents in your hospital for acute colic signs. She is 8 months into her gestation. What differential diagnosis directly related to her pregnancy should be at the top of your list, and can be diagnosed or ruled out within minutes? |
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Definition
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Term
Describe the posture of a foal in breech presentation. |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
TWINS
If you were presented with this case, you would do a vaginal examination/palpation and you would feel 3 or 4 legs, and likely not readily be able to feel the body (maybe with a very long reach...). Your two possible differential diagnoses would be a transverse presentation (pictured) and twins. If both twins were facing the same orientation (cranial or caudal) then you could differentiate by noting that there were more than 2 forelimbs or more than 2 hindlimbs. But if one twin was caudally presented and the other cranially presented, that might be difficult since it would be hard to reach the body and determine for sure that you had one contiguous body or two separate bodies. |
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Term
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Definition
Refer immediately for possible C-Section
If the fetus is still alive and referral for possible c-section is an option, you would IMMEDIATELY send this in for a c-section. You would tell the referral hospital veterinarian that you have a true breech that is viable. Minutes will matter and the prognosis, because of the problem of time, will be guarded. But it is worth a try, and is the only option for a viable foal. |
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Term
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Definition
cranial/anterior longitudinal, dorsosacral, left carpal flexion |
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Term
What is the most likely potential complication that may occur during parturition in a mare with hydrallantois or hydramnios? |
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Definition
Hypovolemia / hypovolemic shock |
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Term
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Definition
cranial/anterior longitudinal, dorsosacral, left shoulder flexion
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Term
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Definition
Attempt mutations with the mare standing
This maldisposition is relatively simple to correct by pushing the fetus back into the abdomen and sliding the leg back into the normal posture. Delaying correction, even for minutes, can result in a rectovaginal fistula. |
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Term
After examining a fetus in anterior longitudinal, dorsosacral, left shoulder flexion
, you now must make a decision as to what to do for a treatment or recommendation. The fetus is alive. Your initial efforts to correct it were without any progress (you tried for about 5 minutes). There is a referral hospital 20 minutes away and a trailer is available. The owners are willing to do what you recommend. What is the best decision?
Keep trying mutations for another 10 or 15 minutes before giving up and then refer the case.
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Refer the case now.
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Euthanize the foal and perform a fetotomy.
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Anesthetize the mare, figure out a way to try to elevate her hind limbs on the farm, and try more mutations.
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Definition
REFER THE CASE NOW
The flexed shoulder malposture can be very difficult to correct in a standing mare, and may still be difficult in some circumstances in an anesthetized mare. If referral is an option and you have not made any initial headway in your mutations, referral is a great decision. You may be fine trying further on the farm either in the standing mare or trying to anesthetize her and elevate her hind limbs, but if you are not, and chances are iffy that you will be successful, then it certainly would have been better to refer. |
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Term
What is the genotype of a horse with Klinefelter's syndrome? |
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Definition
|
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Term
Which viral disease do we test for in a stallion BSE?
Equine herpesvirus 1
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Equine herpesvirus 4
|
Equine viral arteritis virus
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West Nile virus
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|
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Definition
Equine viral arteritis virus |
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Term
Which of the following should NOT be a component of most routine stallion BSE?
Accessory sex gland culture
|
Libido testing
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Virus testing
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Semen analysis
|
Testicular ultrasound
|
Accessory sex gland ultrasound
|
|
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Definition
Accessory sex gland culture |
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Term
Name three ways a tortoiseshell tomcat could exist? |
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Definition
XXY (Klinefelters) XX sex reversal
Chimera |
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Term
I have three cats from the same litter: a black male, an orange female, and a calico female. What were the parents colors? Choose two answers: one for the sire, one for the dam.
The sire was orange.
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The sire was black.
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The sire was tortoiseshell.
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The dam was orange.
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The dam was black.
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The dam was tortoiseshell.
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Definition
Orange, calico female
A black male means that you must have an X chromosome with a black allele in the dam (since the Y chromosome came from the sire). An orange female means that you must have an X chromosome with an orange allele from both dam and sire. And since the sire only has one X chromosome, that means the sire MUST be orange. And we have just established that the dam must have a black allele, and an orange allele, so that makes her tortoiseshell (or calico). The calico female got the orange allele from her sire (all he had to contribute by way of X chromosomes) and got the black allele from her dam. |
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Term
Which tumor is the most common on stallion genitalia? |
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Definition
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Term
Stallions should have at least what percentage of progressively motile sperm in their ejaculates in order to be considered acceptable? |
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Definition
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Term
With regard to future reproductive potential, what, if anything, (besides cloning) may be done for a stallion that unexpectedly dies or is euthanized? |
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Definition
Freeze epididymal sperm
You needed to communicate that you understood HOW or WHERE we would get semen from a stallion postmortem. We collect semen from a stallion postmortem by flushing the cauda epididymides. The ductus deferens are ligated and transected and the testes are removed along with the epididymides to prevent retrograde leakage of semen. But the useful, mature spermatazoa are not present in the testes, nor in the caput or corpus epididymus. Those sperm are too immature to be useful except using ICSI protocols (tomorrow's lecture will cover this). A much more routine, affordable, easy answer is to flush the cauda epididymus and freeze those sperm. This protocol works very well so long as the testes are harvested and the sperm flushed less than 24 hours after death. |
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Term
Recent studies have shown that you can reduce the insemination dose from a stallion to what level and still achieve good pregnancy rates?
100-500 thousand sperm
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1 to 5 million sperm
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20-50 million sperm
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250-500 million sperm
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Definition
1-5 million for low dose insemination |
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Term
Name the two most common pathological conditions of stallion accessory sex glands. |
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Definition
seminal vesiculitis blocked ampullae |
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These two conditions are the only ones reported with any frequency with regard to the accessory sex glands (the ampulla is not a gland, but is usually lumped in with these other glands). I did require that you gave a pathological condition specifically. It was not enough to say "inflammation" or "blockage" because I could not tell what you thought was inflamed or blocked. Prostatitis, for example, or a blocked bulbourethral gland, would have been incorrect.
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Term
You collect semen from a stallion for chilled shipment. You will be loading the semen into two 50 mL centrifuge tubes for shipping and sending 2 doses (1 dose in each tube). According to your evaluations: volume = 35 mL, concentration = 400 x 106/mL, total motility = 75%, progressive motility = 50%. In processing the semen, what ratio of semen to extender would be appropriate? |
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Definition
1:7, 1:8, 1:9
As I advised you in yesterday's lecture, please learn the two equations so that you just have to plug in numbers and then not only will these questions be easy, but so will the situation when you are on clinics or have a job and need to figure this out under pressure. Equation 1a: 400 x 106/mL divided by 25 x 106/mL = 16. Equation 1b: 16 -1 = 15. This gives you a 1:15 ratio of semen:extender. You could have used 50 x 106/mL instead of 25 x 106/mL and that would have resulted in a 1:7 ratio. Both of these ratios are within the allowed range given to you in class of 1:4 to 1:15. So, at this point, any ratio between 1:7 and 1:15 would seem OK. However, when you figure out the amount of semen needed for each dose (which is the next question) and come up with 5 mL, and you remember that you only have 50 mL worth of space in the centrifuge tube, you can only do one of the following: |
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Term
You have a client who would like to use a Quarter horse stallion for reproduction, but he has been unable to produce any babies in the last season. A breeding soundness evaluation reveals testes that are smaller and softer than expected. You collect semen and find only about 3% total motility, with maybe 1% progressive motility. Which of the following will offer the best solution for the client in terms of appropriateness, success, and cost? (cost of each procedure is given in parentheses)
OT ($6,500)
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NT ($110,000)
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GIFT ($6,500)
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ICSI ($6,500)
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ET ($6,500)
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IVF ($6,500)
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gamete rescue ($650)
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Definition
ICSI
All of these techniques were discussed in your reading and the acronyms were used extensively. OT = Oocyte transfer and therefore would not be used directly in this patient (since it is a stallion). Gamete IntraFallopian Transfer (GIFT) is also performed on mares. Ditto for Embryo Transfer. In Vitro Fertilization does not work well in horses. Gamete rescue would not yield a better population in a stallion that seems to have testicular degeneration, as this one does. Nuclear Transfer (cloning) would work, but is very expensive. IntraCytoplasmic Sperm Injection would be a very nice, affordable (relatively) solution for this patient. A singular sperm cell is selected that appears motile and is injected directly into an oocyte, which is then transferred to a recipient mare. |
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