dinoprost and Uterine-Diseases

dinoprost has been researched along with Uterine-Diseases* in 33 studies

Reviews

1 review(s) available for dinoprost and Uterine-Diseases

ArticleYear
[Hypermenorrhea (menorrhagia) and dysmenorrhea].
    Nihon rinsho. Japanese journal of clinical medicine, 2006, Jun-28, Volume: Suppl 2

    Topics: Diagnosis, Differential; Dinoprost; Dysmenorrhea; Estrogens; Female; Hemorrhagic Disorders; Humans; Menorrhagia; Polycystic Ovary Syndrome; Prognosis; Uterine Diseases; Uterus; Vitamin B 6 Deficiency

2006

Trials

4 trial(s) available for dinoprost and Uterine-Diseases

ArticleYear
Plasma concentrations of PGFM and uterine and ovarian responses in early lactation dairy cows fed omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids.
    Theriogenology, 2013, Jul-15, Volume: 80, Issue:2

    A total of 120 dairy cows were assigned randomly to three diets to determine the effects of omega-6 or omega-3 fatty acid (FA) supplementation on uterine diseases, ovarian responses, and blood concentrations of estradiol, progesterone, and PGFM in lactating Holstein dairy cows. Diets contained either protected palm oil (C), extruded linseed (L), or roasted whole soybeans (S), and they were fed from calving to Day 70 postpartum. Estrous cycles were synchronized and ovarian follicular development was monitored daily for an entire cycle. There were no differences among diets in the incidence of lameness, mastitis, or metritis, but the incidence of clinical endometritis was lower (P < 0.05) in cows fed S (0%) compared with cows fed C (28.2%) and L (20.5%). Uterine involution in cows fed S occurred 3.77 and 2.78 days earlier, respectively, than in those fed C and L. The PGFM response 60 minutes after an oxytocin challenge was highest for cows fed S and lowest for cows fed L. Mean plasma progesterone concentration on Day 15 of the synchronized cycle was higher in cows fed S (14.5 ng/mL) and L (15.0 ng/mL) than in those fed C (12.0 ng/mL). The ovulatory follicle on Day 21 of the estrous cycle (estrous = Day 0) was larger in cows fed S (16.1 ± 0.9 mm) and L (15.7 ± 0.7 mm) compared with cows fed C (13.2 ± 0.87 mm; P = 0.02) but there were no significant differences between cows fed diets S and L. The mean number of small and medium follicles and diameter of subordinate follicle were similar among diets. In conclusion, feeding a source of omega-6 FA can be a strategy to improve uterine health after calving, although a source of omega-3 FA such as L should be fed after uterine involution to decrease PGF2α secretion.

    Topics: Animal Feed; Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena; Animals; Cattle; Cattle Diseases; Dairying; Diet; Dinoprost; Fatty Acids, Omega-3; Fatty Acids, Omega-6; Female; Lactation; Ovary; Uterine Diseases; Uterus

2013
Regulation of uterine immune function during the estrous cycle and in response to infectious bacteria in sheep.
    Journal of animal science, 1997, Volume: 75, Issue:6

    Uterine infections are a major reproductive problem in livestock. We conducted two experiments to investigate factors that may modulate uterine responses to infectious bacteria. In Exp. 1, ewes received intrauterine inoculations of either saline or bacteria (75 x 10(7) cfu of Actinomyces pyogenes and 35 x 10(7) cfu of Escherichia coli) on either d 0 or 7 of the estrous cycle. Vena caval samples containing uteroovarian blood were collected twice daily from 12 h before until 6 d after inoculation. Only ewes inoculated with bacteria on d 7 developed infections. Basal (4.8 vs .4 pmol), lipopolysaccharide-stimulated (14.2 vs 6.1 pmol), and concanavalin A-stimulated (65.8 vs 21.6 pmol) blastogenesis (i.e., [3H]thymidine incorporation) of vena caval lymphocytes was greater (P < or = .002) for ewes inoculated with bacteria or saline on d 0 rather than on d 7. The number (per 100 white blood cells) of lymphocytes was greater (41.3 vs 30.8, P < .001) and that of neutrophils was less (42.5 vs 51.6, P < .001) in ewes inoculated on d 0 rather than d 7. Bacteria increased (P < .05) vena caval PGF(2 alpha) but not PGE2 concentrations. In Exp. 2, two protein fractions (molecular weights of > or = 100 kDa and approximately 12.7 kDa) from chromatography of uterine flushings collected on d 0 or 7, or 18 d after ovariectomy on d 0 or 7, modulated phytohemagglutinin-stimulated blastogenesis; the heavier fraction from d 0 had a stimulatory component, but the major effects of the fractions were inhibitory. The differences in immune function and regulation between d 0 and 7 probably explain how the uterus of follicular phase ewes was able to prevent the development of an infection.

    Topics: Actinomyces; Actinomycosis; Animals; Dinoprost; Dinoprostone; Eosinophils; Escherichia coli; Escherichia coli Infections; Estrogens; Estrus; Female; Follicular Phase; Luteal Phase; Lymphocyte Activation; Lymphocytes; Monocytes; Neutrophils; Progesterone; Sheep; Sheep Diseases; Time Factors; Uterine Diseases; Uterus

1997
Comparative treatment of mares susceptible to chronic uterine infection.
    American journal of veterinary research, 1995, Volume: 56, Issue:4

    Four intrauterine treatment strategies were evaluated for effectiveness in mares that were confirmed to be susceptible to chronic uterine infection. Pretreatment samples were obtained at detection of estrus, and a genital strain of Streptococcus zooepidemicus was infused into the uterus when a preovulatory (> 35 mm) follicle was detected. At 12 hours after inoculation, mares were assigned to 1 of 4 selected treatment groups: autologous plasma, 100 ml (n = 5); potassium penicillin, 5 million U in 100 ml of phosphate-buffered saline solution (PBSS; n = 5); 10 mg of prostaglandin F2 alpha in 100 ml of PBSS (n = 5)' and large-volume lavage with normal saline solution (1,000 ml increments). A fifth group, treated with vehicle alone (100 ml of PBSS), served as a negative control (n = 7). All treatments were administered into the uterus. To assess the effectiveness of the treatment, samples for culture and cytologic examination were collected at 96 hours after bacterial inoculation. An effect of treatment was observed on the number of uterine neutrophils (P = 0.02) and growth of S zooepidemicus (P < 0.01). Intrauterine treatment with potassium penicillin, prostaglandin F2 alpha, and large-volume uterine lavage significantly reduced the growth of S zooepidemicus (P < 0.01) as well as the number of neutrophils (P < 0.02). Autologous plasma reduced the number of neutrophils (P < 0.05), but not growth of S zooepidemicus. There was significant correlation between the number of uterine neutrophils and growth of S zooepidemicus for each treatment group (r = 0.57; P < 0.05).

    Topics: Analysis of Variance; Animals; Biopsy; Blood Transfusion, Autologous; Dinoprost; Disease Susceptibility; Endometrium; Female; Horse Diseases; Horses; Infertility, Female; Neutrophils; Penicillins; Streptococcal Infections; Streptococcus; Therapeutic Irrigation; Uterine Diseases; Uterus

1995
Therapeutic effects of moxibustion on delayed uterine involution in postpartum dairy cows.
    The Journal of veterinary medical science, 1993, Volume: 55, Issue:4

    Moxibustion on 12 specific points (Keiketsu in Japanese) was applied for treatment of delayed uterine involution in 16 cows that were diagnosed on the basis of rectal palpation and vaginoscopic examination 21 to 35 days after parturition. The treatment was continued for three consecutive days. Other 32 cows with the delayed uterine involution were either injected intramuscularly with 25 mg PGF2 alpha (17 cows) or infused in utero with 500 mg ampicillin (15 cows). The uterine involution following the treatment was monitored by rectal palpation and vaginoscopic examination. Milk samples were collected three times weekly and used for milk progesterone assay to monitor the ovarian function. No significant difference was observed in the uterine involution among the groups treated with moxibustion, PGF2 alpha or ampicillin. Percentages of cows with abnormal cervical mucus and bacterial isolation from cervical swab decreased remarkably in all groups during 4 weeks after treatment. Forty-six percent of cows with delayed uterine involution was diagnosed as having inactive ovaries. Percentage of cows that responded with ovulation and corpus luteum formation after moxibustion was 67 percent, slightly higher than those in cows treated with PGF2 alpha or ampicillin. Reproductive performance after the moxibustion was well-comparable to those after PGF2 alpha or ampicillin treatment. Result indicates that the moxibustion could be used as the alternative to PGF2 alpha and antibiotics for treating delayed uterine involution in cows.

    Topics: Administration, Topical; Ampicillin; Animals; Cattle; Cattle Diseases; Dinoprost; Female; Milk; Moxibustion; Ovary; Pregnancy; Progesterone; Puerperal Disorders; Uterine Diseases; Uterus

1993

Other Studies

28 other study(ies) available for dinoprost and Uterine-Diseases

ArticleYear
Hydrometra in dairy goats: Ultrasonic variables and therapeutic protocols evaluated during the reproductive season.
    Animal reproduction science, 2018, Volume: 197

    Hydrometra is characterized by the accumulation of fluid within the uterus due to the persistence of corpus luteum. The diagnosis of this disorder occurs with an ultrasonic exam. This study evaluated uterine drainage and fertility rates in goats after the use of d-cloprostenol in association or not with Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) treatment. Twenty Saanen goats, diagnosed with hydrometra, received three 37.5-μg doses of d-cloprostenol laterovulvarly at 10-day intervals. On D5, the goats were assigned into two groups receiving 1 mL of GnRH or saline solution intramuscularly. Ultrasonography (US) was performed from D0 to D25. An US approach was used to rank hydrometra in scores. The pregnancy rate was assessed 45 and 90 days after the end of treatment. The uterine fluid was totally drained after the first and second administration of d-cloprostenol in 50% and 95% of the goats, respectively. In one female, full emptying of the uterus occurred only after D20. US performed at 45 and 90 days after the end of treatment indicated there was a pregnancy rate of 45.0% and 55.0%, respectively. Fertility did not differ between the GnRH-treated and control goats. Those goats not pregnant at 45 days had a follicular cyst, hydrosalpinx or hydrometra. At 90 days, no change was observed in the hydrosalpinx, and four goats had hydrometra. The use of three doses of d-cloprostenol 10 days apart was efficient for induction of draining the contents of the uterus, resulting in a relatively acceptable pregnancy rate. This treatment associated with the US approach can be important when applied in the field.

    Topics: Animals; Cloprostenol; Dinoprost; Estrus Synchronization; Female; Goat Diseases; Goats; Gonadotropin-Releasing Hormone; Insemination, Artificial; Pregnancy; Pregnancy Rate; Reproduction; Seasons; Ultrasonics; Ultrasonography; Uterine Diseases

2018
The effect of puerperal uterine disease on uterine involution in cows assessed by Doppler sonography of the uterine arteries.
    Animal reproduction science, 2013, Volume: 143, Issue:1-4

    The objective of this study was to investigate the effects of puerperal uterine disease on uterine blood flow using trans-rectal Doppler sonography. Lactating Holstein Friesian cows (n=44) were divided into two groups based on whether they were healthy (UD-; n=23) or had uterine disease (UD+; n=21) defined as retained fetal membranes and/or metritis. General clinical examination, vaginoscopy, trans-rectal palpation, and trans-rectal B-Mode sonography were conducted on Days 8, 11, 18, 25 and then every 10 days until Day 65 after calving. Doppler sonography of the uterine arteries was conducted on Day 8, during diestrus after the second ovulation (Days 40-60 after calving) and during diestrus before breeding (Days 63-75 after calving). Cows with uterine disease had greater (P<0.05) uterine size as assessed trans-rectally compared with cows of the UD group. Sonographic measurements on Day 11 after parturition revealed a greater (P<0.05) horn diameter in cows of the UD+ than in the UD- group. Both uterine size and uterine horn diameter decreased more earlier following parturition (P<0.05) in cows of the UD- group. Blood flow volume (BFV) was greater and pulsatility index was less on Day 8 after calving in cows of UD+ than UD- group (P<0.05). In cows of the UD-, but not in those of the UD+ group, there was a further reduction in BFV subsequent to Day 45 after calving (P<0.05). The results of this study show that uterine blood flow measures by trans-rectal Doppler sonography are affected by puerperal uterine disease.

    Topics: Animals; Cattle; Cattle Diseases; Dairying; Dinoprost; Female; Puerperal Disorders; Regional Blood Flow; Ultrasonography, Doppler; Uterine Artery; Uterine Diseases; Uterus

2013
Influence of Trueperella pyogenes in uterus on corpus luteum lifespan in cycling cows.
    Theriogenology, 2013, Mar-15, Volume: 79, Issue:5

    To study ovarian responses to long-term intrauterine infusions of Trueperella pyogenes (T. pyogenes), 12 nonlacting Holstein cows were transcervically infused with 10 mL of a bacterial solution (8-19 × 10(8) colony-forming units/mL), and the uteri of another four cows (control) were similarly infused with sterile physiological saline. Infusions were done six times, every 3 days from Days 3 to 18 (Day 0 = day of spontaneous ovulation). Development of ovarian follicles and the CL were monitored with transrectal, real-time ultrasonography. In five of the experimentally infected cows (group A), the CL, which developed after Day 0, regressed without maturing, and the first dominant follicle (DF) ovulated (mean ± SEM interovulatory interval, 8.6 ± 0.5 days). In group A, plasma 13,14-dihydro-15-keto-PGF(2α) (PGFM) concentrations rose sharply on Day 6, but plasma progesterone concentrations did not increase substantially (as in the control) and were maintained at approximately 2.5 ng/mL after the first DF ovulated. In seven of the 12 infected cows (group B), the developing CL which formed after Day 0 matured and the second DF ovulated. However, the CL lifespan was shorter (P < 0.01) and the second DF ovulated earlier than in control (interovulatory interval, 16.0 ± 0.4 days and 22.3 ± 1.9 days; P < 0.01). Although there was no sharp increase in PGFM in group B, it tended to be high between Days 11 and 18. In conclusion, long-term, intrauterine infusions of T. pyogenes caused the CL to regress prematurely or to have a somewhat shorter lifespan because of release of endogenous PGF(2α).

    Topics: Actinomycetaceae; Actinomycetales Infections; Animals; Cattle; Cattle Diseases; Corpus Luteum; Dinoprost; Estrous Cycle; Female; Ovulation; Progesterone; Ultrasonography; Uterine Diseases; Uterus

2013
Course and severity of postpartum metritis cases following antibiotic and PGF2α administration in postpartum metritis cows infected with BoHV-4.
    Transboundary and emerging diseases, 2011, Volume: 58, Issue:1

    Forty cows between day 1 and day 21 post-calving were examined for the presence of postpartum metritis in a dairy herd that had recently experienced an increase in metritis and that had previously tested positive against bovine herpes virus 4 (BoHV-4) by various methods. Antibodies against BoHV-4 were detected in sera from 15 of 22 cows. For the virological study, uterine swab samples of 22 cows with metritis were used and tested for BoHV-4 using polymerase chain reaction (PCR), virus isolation (VI), and immunofluorescence techniques. Twenty-two point seven per cent (5/22) of the vaginal discharge samples obtained from cows with metritis were found positive for BoHV-4 DNA by PCR. All of these samples were also positive in VI and/or immune fluorescence assay (IF). Swab samples were also tested for bacteria. Empirical therapy with a broad spectrum antibiotic (oxytetracycline) was administrated, pending culture and antibiotic sensitivity result. All cows with puerperal metritis or clinical metritis (CM) were treated with intra-uterine (i.u.) administration of oxytetracycline and with intramuscular (i.m.) injections of dinoprost tromethamine (PGF(2)α) for three consecutive days. Concurrently, with the administration of oxytetracycline and PGF(2)α, cows with a rectal temperature >39.5°C received an additional treatment with oxytetracycline (i.m) for three consecutive days. According to the antibiotic test result, on day 3 after the last oxytetracycline and PGF(2)α administrations, all cows were treated with a combination of amoxicillin and clavulanic acid (i.u.) for three consecutive days. All cows with metritis and that were positive for BoHV-4 recovered clinically after the administration of antibiotic and PGF(2)α. In conclusion, postpartum metritis cases in cows infected BoHV-4 recovered clinically following early diagnosis and prolonged treatments with a combination of antibiotics and PGF(2)α.

    Topics: Animals; Antibodies, Viral; Bacteria; Bacterial Infections; beta-Lactams; Cattle; Cattle Diseases; Dinoprost; Female; Herpesviridae Infections; Herpesvirus 4, Bovine; Oxytetracycline; Postpartum Period; Puerperal Infection; Turkey; Uterine Diseases; Vagina

2011
Second trimester abortion in women with and without previous uterine scar: Eleven years experience from a developing country.
    The European journal of contraception & reproductive health care : the official journal of the European Society of Contraception, 2011, Volume: 16, Issue:5

    To study the safety of second trimester abortion in women with previous uterine scar.. We screened the records of 518 women who underwent an abortion between 12 and 20 weeks' gestation at the Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research, Chandigarh, India, from January 2000 to December 2010. Methods used for abortion were: (i) vaginal misoprostol with or without pre-treatment with mifepristone, and (ii) intracervical dinoprostol gel or vaginal misoprostol ± extra-amniotic saline ± oxytocin infusion. Seventeen women, aborted by means of a hysterotomy, were excluded from further analysis.. Of the remaining 501 women, 44 had a uterine scar (Group 1) and 457 had none (Group 2). In Group 1, 40/44 (91%) and in Group 2, 452/457 (99%) women aborted successfully. The mean induction-abortion interval (IAI) was similar in the two groups (15.03 ± 10.69 hours and 12.52 ± 9.0 hours in Groups 1 and 2, respectively; p = 0.083). There were three uterine ruptures, 1/44 (2%) in group 1 and 2/457 (0.4%) in group 2 (p = 0.132, NS); all three women had received mifepristone followed by vaginal misoprostol.. In women with a scarred uterus, midtrimester abortion may be successfully achieved using any of the aforementioned regimens.

    Topics: Abortifacient Agents, Nonsteroidal; Abortion, Induced; Adult; Case-Control Studies; Cicatrix; Developing Countries; Dinoprost; Female; Humans; India; Mifepristone; Misoprostol; Pregnancy; Pregnancy Trimester, Second; Retrospective Studies; Uterine Diseases; Uterine Rupture

2011
Supplementation with calcium salts of linoleic and trans-octadecenoic acids improves fertility of lactating dairy cows.
    Reproduction in domestic animals = Zuchthygiene, 2010, Volume: 45, Issue:1

    Objectives were to evaluate effects of feeding a calcium salt rich in linoleic and trans-octadecenoic acids (LTFA) on synthesis of prostaglandin F(2alpha) based on its metabolite (PGFM), uterine involution and pregnancy rates in lactating dairy cows. Five hundred and eleven Holstein cows were blocked according to parity, body condition score and milk yield in the previous lactation. Primiparous and multiparous cows were randomly assigned to one of the two treatments consisting of calcium salt (2% diet dry matter) of either palm oil (PO) or LTFA from 25 days prepartum to 80 days of lactation. Cows were time-inseminated at 70 +/- 3 days postpartum. Feeding LTFA tended (p = 0.08) to decrease the incidence of puerperal metritis (15.1% vs 8.8%). Primiparous cows supplemented with LTFA showed larger increase in plasma PGFM concentration at day 1 postpartum (17018 vs 6897 pm). Pregnancy rate after first insemination tended (p = 0.07) to be greater at 27 days after insemination (37.9% vs 28.6%), and was greater (p = 0.05) at 41 days after insemination (35.5% vs 25.8%) for cows fed LTFA compared with PO. These results indicate that unsaturated fatty acids fed in a rumen inert form have the potential to modulate reproductive events and improve pregnancy rates in lactating dairy cows.

    Topics: Animals; Calcium; Cattle; Cattle Diseases; Dietary Supplements; Dinoprost; Female; Fertility; Insemination, Artificial; Lactation; Linoleic Acids; Logistic Models; Oleic Acids; Palm Oil; Plant Oils; Pregnancy; Uterine Diseases

2010
Effect of intrauterine infusion of ceftiofur on uterine health and fertility in dairy cows.
    Journal of dairy science, 2009, Volume: 92, Issue:4

    Objectives were to determine the effects of intrauterine (i.u.) infusion of ceftiofur hydrochloride on uterine health and fertility of dairy cows already receiving PGF(2alpha) for estrous synchronization. Holstein cows at 44 +/- 3 d in milk (DIM) were blocked by parity and diagnosis of metritis in the first 14 DIM and of other illnesses and, within each block, randomly assigned to 1 of 2 treatments: a single i.u. infusion of 125 mg of ceftiofur hydrochloride at 44 +/- 3 DIM (ceftiofur, n = 396), or no i.u. infusion (control, n = 416). All cows received 25 mg of PGF(2alpha) at 37 +/- 3 and 51 +/- 3 DIM as part of an estrous synchronization protocol. A subset of 547 cows was evaluated for clinical endometritis immediately before treatment, and 202 cows had an aseptic uterine sample collected before the injection of PGF(2alpha) at 51 +/- 3 DIM for bacteriology and diagnosis of subclinical endometritis (> or =5% neutrophils). Pregnancy on d 38 +/- 3 and 180 +/- 7 after the first artificial insemination, pregnancy loss, and interval from calving to pregnancy in the first 300 DIM were evaluated. The proportions of cows diagnosed with clinical endometritis before treatment were similar between ceftiofur and control treatments. Intrauterine infusion with ceftiofur did not influence prevalence of subclinical endometritis and positive uterine culture 7 d after treatment; however, it reduced the prevalence of positive uterine culture in cows with clinical endometritis (29.0 vs. 51.4%) and reduced the overall prevalence of Arcanobacterium pyogenes (1.0 vs. 7.6%) at 51 +/- 3 DIM. Cows with clinical endometritis had increased prevalence of A. pyogenes (10.3 vs. 1.5%), Escherichia coli (5.9 vs. 0.75%), and overall positive uterine culture (41.2 vs. 22.4%); however, cows with subclinical endometritis only had an increased prevalence of A. pyogenes (10.2 vs. 1.5%). Ceftiofur did not affect pregnancy per artificial insemination in all cows or in cows previously diagnosed with metritis or clinical endometritis. Interval to pregnancy was similar for control and ceftiofur cows. Intrauterine infusion of ceftiofur hydrochloride reduced the prevalence of uterine infection in cows with clinical endometritis, and the prevalence of A. pyogenes, but did not affect the prevalence of subclinical endometritis or fertility of dairy cows already receiving PGF(2alpha).

    Topics: Animals; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Bacteria; Cattle; Cattle Diseases; Cephalosporins; Dairying; Dinoprost; Estrus Synchronization; Female; Fertility; Kaplan-Meier Estimate; Pregnancy; Random Allocation; Uterine Diseases; Uterus

2009
Plasma PGF 2 alpha metabolite levels in cats with uterine disease.
    Theriogenology, 2009, Volume: 72, Issue:9

    Uterine disease induces PGF(2 alpha) increase in many animal species, which can be measured by the metabolite 15-keto-(13,14)-dihydro-PGF(2 alpha) (PGFM). Plasma PGFM levels are associated with severity of the uterine disease and presence of systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) in dogs. The objectives in this study were to investigate PGFM levels, presence of SIRS, and clinical and laboratory parameters in female cats as possible indicators for severity of uterine disease. In total, 7 female cats with pyometra, 2 with mucometra, 7 with cystic endometrial hyperplasia (CEH), and 14 healthy control cats were included. Physical examination, ovariohysterectomy, and histopathology were performed, laboratory parameters were analyzed, and PGFM levels were analyzed by radioimmunoassay. Analysis of variance, Fisher's exact test, Student's t-test and Pearson's product moment correlation coefficient were used for data analysis. In cats with pyometra, mean PGFM levels were increased (21.1 nmol L(-1)) but were decreased in cats with CEH (0.4 nmol L(-1)) compared with control cats (0.6 nmol L(-1)). In cats with mucometra, the mean PGFM level was 8.8 nmol L(-1). Systemic inflammatory response syndrome was present in 6 (85%) cats with pyometra, 1 cat with mucometra, and 1 cat with CEH. Hospitalization length was negatively correlated with albumin and positively correlated with total white blood cell count (WBC), neutrophils, band neutrophils (BN), percentage BN (PBN), and monocytes. Pyometra and mucometra were associated with increased plasma levels of PGFM. The parameters albumin, WBC, neutrophils, BN, PBN, and monocytes may be useful to determine morbidity as measured by hospitalization length.

    Topics: Animals; Case-Control Studies; Cat Diseases; Cats; Dinoprost; Endometrial Hyperplasia; Female; Hospitals, Animal; Length of Stay; Physical Examination; Pyometra; Severity of Illness Index; Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome; Uterine Diseases

2009
Induction of canine pyometra by inoculation of Escherichia coli into the uterus and its relationship to reproductive features.
    Animal reproduction science, 2005, Volume: 87, Issue:3-4

    To characterize oestrus-related factors affecting the induction of and recovery from pyometra in bitches, 60 clinically healthy beagle bitches were used for induction of pyometra by inoculation of Escherichia coli into the uterus during oestrous and metoestrous stages. The animals were classified into the following six groups according to inoculation time: Days 1-10, 11-20, 21-30, 31-40, 41-50 and 51-60 after LH surge. The incidence of pyometra during the periods Days 11-20 and 21-30 after LH surge was 90.9% and 78.9% respectively, while that during Days 1-10 and 51-60 after LH surge was less than 20%, and the patterns of the incidence of pyometra and the serum progesterone levels were similar. There was no difference in the incidence of pyometra induced in bitches less than 5 years old compared to bitches over 6 years old. Oestrus in all of the bitches with pyometra induced by E. coli returned with or without PGF 2alpha treatment, unlike in bitches with spontaneous pyometra. The duration of the oestrous cycle in the non-treated and PGF 2alpha-treated groups was 231.4+/-55.2 days and 162.1+/-40.6 days (P < 0.001), respectively, and there was no difference in the rate of return of oestrus between the two groups. The conception rate in all of the bitches in which oestrus had returned was 81.8%. The above findings indicate that the period during which severe pyometra could be induced was limited to the early stage in metoestrus.

    Topics: Animals; Animals, Newborn; Dinoprost; Dog Diseases; Dogs; Escherichia coli; Escherichia coli Infections; Estrus; Female; Litter Size; Luteinizing Hormone; Male; Parasympatholytics; Pregnancy; Progesterone; Pyrrolidines; Random Allocation; Uterine Diseases

2005
Validation of a 13,14-dihydro-15-keto-PGF(2alpha) enzymeimmunoassay and its application for reproductive health monitoring in postpartum buffaloes.
    Animal reproduction science, 2005, Volume: 90, Issue:1-2

    The objective of the present study was to validate a simple, sensitive and direct enzymeimmunoassay (EIA) procedure for 13,14-dihydro-15-keto-PGF(2alpha) (PGFM) for use in buffaloes with postpartum reproductive disorders and determine the practicalities of using plasma concentrations of 13,14-dihydro-15-keto-PGF(2alpha) for monitoring their reproductive health. The EIA was used for determination of the circulating levels of PGFM associated with the retention of fetal membranes, postpartum endometritis and variable postpartum intervals. The concentrations of PGFM with retention of fetal membranes in the periparturient period were lower as compared to buffaloes that had uneventful parturitions. Concentrations of PGFM associated with postpartum endometritis were elevated as compared to those in buffaloes free of reproductive tract infections. Buffaloes having higher plasma concentrations of PGFM in early postpartum period had shorter postpartum intervals, indicating the association between PGFM concentrations postpartum and uterine involution as well as the resumption of estrous cycle in this species. The study presents the possibility of using circulating PGFM concentrations for monitoring the postpartum reproductive health of buffaloes.

    Topics: Animals; Antibody Specificity; Buffaloes; Dinoprost; Endometritis; Female; Immunoenzyme Techniques; Placenta, Retained; Postpartum Period; Pregnancy; Puerperal Disorders; Reproducibility of Results; Reproduction; Sensitivity and Specificity; Uterine Diseases

2005
Role of ovarian progesterone and potential role of prostaglandin F2alpha and prostaglandin E2 in modulating the uterine response to infectious bacteria in postpartum ewes.
    Journal of animal science, 2003, Volume: 81, Issue:1

    In sheep and cattle, the postpartum uterus is resistant to bacterial challenge until after corpora lutea develop. A 2 x 2 factorial arrangement of treatments was used to determine whether prostaglandins may mediate the effects of progesterone in transforming the postpartum uterus from resistant to susceptible. On d 14 postpartum, ewes (n = 6/group) were ovariectomized or sham ovariectomized, and the vena cava was catheterized for daily collection of uteroovarian-enriched blood. From d 15 to 20, ewes received twice daily intramuscular injections of progesterone in sesame oil or plain sesame oil. On d 20, each uterus received 75 x 10(7) cfu of Arcanobacterium pyogenes and 35 x 10(7) cfu of Escherichia coli. Uteri were collected on d 25 and examined for signs of infection. For each blood sample, unstimulated and mitogen-stimulated lymphocyte proliferation was measured as [3H]thymidine incorporation, smears were prepared for differential white blood cell (WBC) counts, and progesterone, prostaglandin F2alpha, (PGF2alpha), and prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) were quantified. All 12 progesterone-treated, but only two of the 12 oil-treated, ewes developed uterine infections (P < 0.001). Progesterone treatment increased (P < 0.001; 3.1 vs 1.5 ng/mL) and ovariectomy decreased (P < 0.001; 3.7 vs 0.9 ng/mL) vena caval progesterone. Progesterone treatment reduced (P < 0.01) PGF2alpha, (303.9 vs 801.3 pg/mL), and PGF2alpha was greater (P < 0.05) before than after inoculation (626.4 vs 478.8 pg/mL). The PGE2 concentration was greater in progesterone-treated, ovary-intact ewes than in ewes in the other groups (ovariectomy x progesterone treatment; P < 0.01). Ovariectomy increased (P < 0.005; 4.4 vs 2.9 pmol) and progesterone treatment decreased (P < 0.05; 3.2 vs 4.1 pmol) concanavalin A-stimulated lymphocyte proliferation. Ovariectomy increased lipopolysaccharides-stimulated proliferation (P < 0.05; 2.4 vs 1.9 pmol). For neutrophils per 100 WBC, the ovariectomy x progesterone and progesterone x period interactions were significant (P < 0.01). The ovariectomy x progesterone interaction was significant (P < 0.01) for lymphocytes per 100 WBC. Ovariectomy decreased monocytes (P < 0.001; 10 vs 13) and increased eosinophils (P < 0.001; 10 vs 5) per 100 WBC. Progesterone makes the postpartum uterus in ewes susceptible to infection, but ovariectomy allows ewes to remain resistant; uterine prostaglandins may mediate this change. This model creates opportunities to determine the mechanism

    Topics: Actinomycetales Infections; Animals; Dinoprost; Dinoprostone; Disease Susceptibility; Escherichia coli Infections; Female; Ovariectomy; Postpartum Period; Progesterone; Puerperal Infection; Random Allocation; Sheep; Sheep Diseases; Uterine Diseases; Uterus

2003
Thenogenology question of the month. Pyometra.
    Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association, 2002, Jan-15, Volume: 220, Issue:2

    Topics: Animals; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Dinoprost; Dog Diseases; Dogs; Escherichia coli Infections; Female; Leukocyte Count; Polyuria; Suppuration; Urinalysis; Uterine Diseases

2002
Effect of experimentally induced metritis on uterine involution, acute phase protein response and PGFM secretion in the postpartum ewe.
    The Veterinary record, 2002, May-11, Volume: 150, Issue:19

    Topics: Acute-Phase Proteins; Animals; Dinoprost; Endometritis; Female; Postpartum Period; Pregnancy; Sheep; Sheep Diseases; Uterine Diseases

2002
Abnormal uterus with polycysts, accumulation of uterine prostaglandins, and reduced fertility in mice heterozygous for acyl-CoA synthetase 4 deficiency.
    Biochemical and biophysical research communications, 2001, Jun-22, Volume: 284, Issue:4

    Arachidonate released by various stimuli is rapidly reesterified into membrane phospholipids initiated by acyl-CoA synthetase (ACS) and subsequent acyl-transfer reactions. ACS4 is an arachidonate-preferring enzyme abundant in steroidogenic tissues and postulated to modulate eicosanoid production. Female mice heterozygous for ACS4 deficiency become pregnant less frequently and produce small litters with extremely low transmission of the disrupted alleles. Striking morphological changes, including extremely enlarged uteri and lumina filled with numerous proliferative cysts of various sizes, were detected in ACS4+/- females. Furthermore, marked accumulation of prostaglandins was seen in the uterus of the heterozygous females. These results indicate that ACS4 modulates female fertility and uterine prostaglandin production.

    Topics: 6-Ketoprostaglandin F1 alpha; Animals; Chimera; Coenzyme A Ligases; Crosses, Genetic; Cysts; Dinoprost; Dinoprostone; Female; Genotype; Heterozygote; Infertility, Female; Litter Size; Male; Mice; Mice, Knockout; Mice, Transgenic; Prostaglandins; Restriction Mapping; Sex Ratio; Uterine Diseases; Uterus

2001
Intravaginal prostaglandin F2 alpha for the treatment of metritis and pyometra in the bitch.
    Acta veterinaria Hungarica, 1999, Volume: 47, Issue:1

    The purpose of this study was to determine whether intravaginal prostaglandin F2 alpha (PGF2 alpha) would be effective for the treatment of metritis or pyometra in the bitch. Seventeen bitches with metritis or pyometra were treated with PGF2 alpha. Prostaglandin F2 alpha (150 micrograms/kg body weight) was administered once or twice daily by infusing 0.3 ml per 10 kg body wt into the vaginal lumen. Bitches were also treated with amoxicillin (15 mg/kg body wt/48 h) and/or gentamicin (4 mg/kg body wt/day) administered as intramuscular (i.m.) injections. Fifteen bitches were treated successfully with intravaginally administered PGF2 alpha for 3 to 12 days and with intramuscularly administered antibiotics for 4 to 12 days. Success of treatment was judged by cessation of vaginal discharge, the absence of fluid in the uterus as determined by ultrasonography, and the overall health status of the animal. As two bitches with pyometra showed clinical deterioration in spite of medical treatment, ovariohysterectomy was performed after the first and the second treatment, respectively. No side effects (salivation, vomiting, diarrhoea, hyperpnoea, ataxia, urination, anxiety, pupillary dilatation followed by contraction) were observed after PGF2 alpha treatment. The disease did not recur during the subsequent oestrous cycles within 12 months after the initial treatment. The results demonstrate that intravaginal administration of PGF2 alpha was effective in 13 dogs (86.6%) with metritis or pyometra, and caused no side effects. Although the study was based on a relatively small number of cases, it is concluded that prostaglandin F2 alpha can be a useful means of treating bitches with metritis or pyometra. However, in severe cases of pyometra ovariohysterectomy is needed.

    Topics: Abortifacient Agents, Nonsteroidal; Administration, Intravaginal; Amoxicillin; Animals; Dinoprost; Dog Diseases; Dogs; Endometritis; Female; Gentamicins; Hysterectomy; Ovariectomy; Penicillins; Suppuration; Uterine Diseases

1999
Acute phase protein response of ewes and the release of PGFM in relation to uterine involution and the presence of intrauterine bacteria.
    The Veterinary record, 1999, May-01, Volume: 144, Issue:18

    The rate of uterine involution postpartum was monitored in 13 suckling mule ewes by using radio-opaque markers and radiography, and each ewe was also monitored for intrauterine bacterial contamination during the first week, using a sterile guarded swab. Peripheral plasma or serum concentrations of haptoglobin, seromucoid, ceruloplasmin and 15-keto-13,14-dihydro-prostaglandin F2 alpha (PGFM) were measured up to six weeks postpartum. The maximum reduction in the length of the uterine body and in the diameters of the horns occurred by 28 days postpartum, except in one ewe in which the size of the uterus continued to decrease for 42 days. Four ewes were positive for intrauterine bacterial contamination; Escherichia coli, clostridial species, Staphylococcus aureus, Streptococcus uberis and Enterococcus species were isolated in pure or mixed culture. The presence of intrauterine bacteria did not affect the time for the completion of uterine involution. No bacteria were isolated from the ewe in which involution was delayed, but it had a different acute phase protein response and was therefore excluded from further analyses. In the remaining 12 ewes the mean postpartum haptoglobin response increased, with peak concentrations occurring on day 1, and decreased slowly as uterine involution progressed, but the four contaminated ewes had a significantly greater response. There was no difference between the prepartum and postpartum concentrations of seromucoid in the eight sterile ewes, but significant increases were observed in the contaminated group; the concentrations of ceruloplasmin did not vary in either group. The concentrations of PGFM were higher during the early postpartum period in the ewes with contaminated uteri.

    Topics: Acute-Phase Proteins; Animals; Dinoprost; Female; Sheep; Sheep Diseases; Uterine Diseases; Uterus

1999
Intrauterine infection and the effects of inflammatory mediators on prostaglandin production by myometrial cells from pregnant women.
    American journal of obstetrics and gynecology, 1996, Volume: 174, Issue:2

    Our purpose was to evaluate the effects of known stimulants of prostaglandin production on cultured myometrial cells from women in labor with and without intrauterine infection.. Myometrial segments were obtained from 16 patients between 33 and 40 weeks' gestation who had been in labor for > or = 8 hours at cesarean delivery; 8 patients had clinical chorioamnionitis and 8 did not. Myometrial cells were isolated and grown in culture. Incubations were conducted with interleukin-1 beta, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, or epidermal growth factor. Prostaglandin E2, prostaglandin F2 alpha, and 6-keto-prostaglandin F1 alpha (the stable metabolite of prostacyclin) were measured by radioimmunoassay, and cellular protein was determined.. Cultured human myometrial cells from patients with and without prior intrauterine infection produced prostaglandins in response to interleukin-1 beta, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, and epidermal growth factor at a significantly increased rate (p<0.05 vs controls at and above 10 ng/ml of interleukin-1 beta, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, and epidermal growth factor). The major prostaglandin produced in response to each stimulant was 6-keto-prostaglandin F1 alpha; however, this response was attenuated in cells from patients with intrauterine infection.. Cultured human myometrial cells from patients with and without prior intrauterine infection respond to known stimulants of prostaglandin production. Prior intrauterine infection has no effect on baseline prostaglandin production, but the amount of prostacyclin produced as a response to cellular stimulants is decreased with prior intrauterine infection. This effect may have a role in regulating myometrial function in intrauterine infection.

    Topics: 6-Ketoprostaglandin F1 alpha; Cells, Cultured; Cytokines; Dinoprost; Dinoprostone; Epidermal Growth Factor; Female; Humans; Infections; Interleukin-1; Myometrium; Pregnancy; Pregnancy Complications, Infectious; Prostaglandins; Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha; Uterine Diseases

1996
Observations on the treatment and diagnosis of open pyometra in the bitch (Canis familiaris).
    Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement, 1993, Volume: 47

    Eight bitches presenting with vaginal discharges were diagnosed as having open pyometra, as assessed by ultrasonographic, radiographic, haematological and clinical investigation. Plasma progesterone was assessed before treatment with prostaglandin F2 alpha (Dinoprost) and three of the bitches had low concentrations. Each bitch was given multiple injections of PGF2 alpha and monitored during and after treatment. All bitches had basal progesterone concentrations after treatment and the uterine diameters were markedly reduced by that time. One bitch has subsequently produced a litter of seven pups. Five of six bitches that were subjected to ovariohysterectomy 1-2 months later had normal uteri, although one had caseated areas in the uterine wall.

    Topics: Animals; Bacterial Infections; Dinoprost; Dog Diseases; Dogs; Female; Ultrasonography; Uterine Diseases; Uterus

1993
Hydrometra in dairy goats: reproductive performance after treatment with prostaglandins.
    The Veterinary record, 1993, Aug-21, Volume: 133, Issue:8

    An intramuscular injection of 5 mg dinoprost caused a discharge of uterine fluid (cloudburst) in 49 cases of hydrometra in goats during the breeding seasons of 1988, 1989 and 1990. A spontaneous oestrus after the cloudburst was allowed to occur in 20 of the goats; in nine (45 per cent) of them a hydrometra recurred, three conceived at the first oestrus and eight returned to oestrus. Oestrus was induced in 29 other cases by means of a second intramuscular administration of 5 mg dinoprost, 12 days after the cloudburst. In this group a hydrometra recurred in only one goat, 14 goats (48 per cent) conceived at the first oestrus and 14 returned to oestrus. Of the animals in which a pseudopregnancy occurred once or more during the same breeding season, 85 per cent became pregnant, compared with 97 per cent of unaffected older goats. The mean number of kids of the goats that became pregnant and kidded after treatment for hydrometra was 2.0 compared with 2.3 for unaffected animals. The results indicate that a single administration of prostaglandin is not a satisfactory therapy for a hydrometra, but that reproductive performance improves when a second injection is given 12 days after the cloudburst.

    Topics: Animals; Corpus Luteum; Dinoprost; Female; Goat Diseases; Goats; Injections, Intramuscular; Pregnancy; Pseudopregnancy; Reproduction; Uterine Diseases

1993
Use of prostaglandin products by dairy cattle owners, beef cattle owners, and veterinarians.
    Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association, 1993, Dec-15, Volume: 203, Issue:12

    Questionnaires regarding the use of prostaglandin F2 alpha and its analogues (hereafter referred to as PG) were sent to 332 Alabama beef cattle owners and to 279 Alabama dairy cattle owners after attempting to contact them by telephone to request their participation in the survey. Questionnaires concerning the use of PG in their clients' herds were likewise sent to 147 food animal and mixed animal practitioners in Alabama after attempting telephone contact. Response among beef cattle owners, dairy cattle owners, and veterinarians to whom questionnaires were mailed was 64.5, 61.6, and 75.5%, respectively. Only 7.4% (13 of 175) of respondent beef cattle owners reported use of PG in their herds, and this use was predominantly for artificial insemination and embryo transfer. In contrast, 66.5% (109 of 164) of respondent dairy cattle owners reported use of PG, generally with satisfactory results, for some of the following conditions: unobserved estrus (n = 77), uterine infections (n = 74), retained placenta (n = 65), cystic ovaries (n = 56), estrus synchronization (n = 45), and induction of parturition (n = 13). Although 94.9% of respondent veterinarians treated cattle with PG, those attending beef herds thought that more important strategies were available for improvement of beef cattle productivity than increased use of PG. Among these strategies were shorter calving seasons, improved nutrition, better record keeping, more frequent herd health visits, improved animal identification, and increased use of bull breeding soundness examinations.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

    Topics: Agriculture; Alabama; Animals; Breeding; Cattle; Dairying; Dinoprost; Drug Utilization; Embryo Transfer; Estrus Synchronization; Female; Insemination, Artificial; Labor, Induced; Male; Ovarian Cysts; Placenta Diseases; Pregnancy; Surveys and Questionnaires; Uterine Diseases; Veterinary Medicine

1993
[The role of prostaglandins in fertility. Experimental research].
    Bollettino della Societa italiana di biologia sperimentale, 1993, Volume: 69, Issue:1

    Prevention of postoperative adhesion is an issue that continues to elude the abdominal and reproductive surgeon. Adhesions seem to be a result of an inflammatory process and it is well known that prostaglandins play an important role in such an event. In an attempt to improve the results of microsurgery, we have tried in this study to examine the effect of local intraperitoneal application of prostaglandins (PGE2 and PGF2 alpha) on adhesion formation in the rat after traumatizing to the uterine horn. Prostaglandins applied locally were found to increase intraperitoneal adhesion formation at the injured sites, in comparison with controls. Also, we have reported on histological examination an increased accumulation of inflammatory cells in traumatized areas. However, we didn't observe a reduced fertility in rats treated with prostaglandins because these substances induce follicular rupture by activation of proteolytic enzyme located in the follicular wall. We conclude that prostaglandins play an important role in the process of adhesion formation. Using antiprostaglandins agents could improve the outcomes of reproductive surgery.

    Topics: Animals; Dinoprost; Dinoprostone; Female; Infertility, Female; Inflammation; Microsurgery; Ovarian Follicle; Pregnancy; Prostaglandins; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Tissue Adhesions; Uterine Diseases; Uterus

1993
Treatment of pyometra in cats, using prostaglandin F2 alpha: 21 cases (1982-1990).
    Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association, 1992, Mar-15, Volume: 200, Issue:6

    Treatment with prostaglandin F2 alpha (PGF2 alpha) was evaluated in 21 queens with open-cervix pyometra. The PGF2 alpha was administered (0.1 or 0.25 mg/kg of body weight, sc, q 12 to 24 h) for 3 or 5 days. Transient postinjection reactions caused by PGF2 alpha administration included vocalization, panting, restlessness, grooming, tenesmus, salivation, diarrhea, kneading, mydriasis, emesis, urination, and lordosis. Reactions began as quickly as 30 seconds after PGF2 alpha administration and lasted as long as 60 minutes. All queens improved clinically after PGF2 alpha treatment. One month after completion of the initial series, 1 queen required a second series of PGF2 alpha injections before pyometra resolved. Of 21 queens, 20 (95%) resumed normal estrous cycles without further treatment and 17 (81%) delivered normal litter(s). Use of PGF2 alpha is an acceptable treatment for open-cervix pyometra in queens.

    Topics: Animals; Cat Diseases; Cats; Dinoprost; Estrus; Female; Injections, Subcutaneous; Leukocyte Count; Progesterone; Retrospective Studies; Uterine Diseases

1992
The effect of prostaglandins and aspirin--an inhibitor of prostaglandin synthesis--on adhesion formation in rats.
    Human reproduction (Oxford, England), 1991, Volume: 6, Issue:2

    The effect of intraperitoneal application of prostaglandins E2 and F2 alpha and of aspirin, a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug, on the formation of intraperitoneal adhesions was investigated in rats, in view of the main role of the body's reaction in adhesion formation. Intraperitoneal adhesions were induced by inflicting uniform trauma to the uterine serosa. It was demonstrated that prostaglandin E2 may increase adhesion formation and that intraperitoneal aspirin is able to inhibit its formation.

    Topics: Animals; Aspirin; Cyclooxygenase Inhibitors; Dinoprost; Dinoprostone; Drug Therapy, Combination; Female; Prostaglandins; Rats; Rats, Inbred Strains; Tissue Adhesions; Uterine Diseases

1991
[Use of a low dose prostaglandin F2 alpha in bitches].
    Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde, 1991, Volume: 133, Issue:7

    The dosage of Prostaglandin F2 alpha used until the present (100, 250 and 1000 micrograms/kg bw), in order to treat pyometra in the bitch, was accompanied with side effects such as salivation, vomiting and diarrhea. In the present work, the efficiency of low dose Prostaglandin (20 micrograms/kg bw) was examined in two different groups of patients: Group 1: Included 9 bitches pregnant for a period of 5-7 weeks duration. Initially the bitches were treated 3 or 4 times per day with Prostaglandin F2 alpha. In these cases abortion took place within 4 to 11 days. Group 2: 12 dogs, suffering from pyometra, were treated 3 times per day with PGF2 alpha for 8 days. In 9 dogs the pyometra resolved and the bitches came in estrus 2-5 months after treatment. 7 bitches have been mated and 6 of these gave birth to healthy litters. During a follow-up period of at least 10 months there has not been a reoccurrence of pyometra. In 3 out of the 12 dogs the uteri were still enlarged after 8 days of treatment. These bitches underwent ovariohysterectomy and a cystic hyperplasia of the endometrium was diagnosed histologically. The low dose (20 micrograms/kg BW) Prostaglandin F2 alpha induced in all dogs the expulsion of the uterine contents. Side effects during the treatment were not observed.

    Topics: Abortion, Induced; Animals; Dinoprost; Dog Diseases; Dogs; Female; Follow-Up Studies; Pregnancy; Pregnancy, Animal; Uterine Diseases

1991
Treatment of pyometra in the bitch.
    The Veterinary record, 1990, Feb-17, Volume: 126, Issue:7

    Topics: Animals; Dinoprost; Dog Diseases; Dogs; Female; Remission Induction; Trimethoprim, Sulfamethoxazole Drug Combination; Uterine Diseases

1990
Prostaglandin F2 alpha treatment of canine pyometra.
    Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association, 1986, Dec-15, Volume: 189, Issue:12

    Immediate and long-term outcomes of prostaglandin F2 alpha treatment for canine pyometra were studied in 10 bitches. Examination of pretreatment uterine biopsy specimens, taken for histopathologic diagnosis and classification of disease severity, revealed either type III or IV pyometra. Dinoprost tromethamine (0.25 or 0.5 mg/kg of body weight, SC) was given once daily for 3 days. Bitches were bred at the first posttreatment estrus and monitored for a minimum of one year. When pure cultures of Escherichia coli (n = 3) or Staphylococcus aureus (n = 1) were obtained from the vagina, these bacteria also were found in the uterus. Pretreatment WBC counts often did not reflect the severity of histopathologic findings in the uterus, but posttreatment WBC counts were useful in monitoring response to treatment. Four bitches produced a litter within one year of treatment. Four bitches (40%) had recurrence of pyometra within one year of treatment, and these same bitches had another recurrence after an additional prostaglandin treatment. Three additional bitches had a recurrence by 27 months after therapy, establishing a total recurrence rate of 77% (7/9). Results suggested that subclinical disease may persist after treatment, with clinical recurrence during diestrus. Despite the high recurrence rate, it was concluded that this treatment is a practical treatment for canine pyometra when reproduction is desired.

    Topics: Animals; Bacterial Infections; Biopsy; Dinoprost; Dog Diseases; Dogs; Female; Fertility; Pregnancy; Prostaglandins F, Synthetic; Recurrence; Uterine Diseases; Uterus

1986
Use of intravenous terbutaline to facilitate uterine repositioning.
    American journal of obstetrics and gynecology, 1985, Nov-01, Volume: 153, Issue:5

    Topics: Dinoprost; Female; Humans; Magnesium Sulfate; Pregnancy; Prostaglandins F; Puerperal Disorders; Terbutaline; Uterine Diseases; Uterus

1985
Prostaglandin concentrations in uterine fluid of cows with pyometra.
    Canadian journal of comparative medicine : Revue canadienne de medecine comparee, 1985, Volume: 49, Issue:4

    Uterine fluid was obtained from eight clinical cases of pyometra with retained corpus luteum and nine additional samples of fluid were collected from animals slaughtered at an abattoir. These samples, along with uterine flushes from normal cows in their luteal phase were analyzed for prostaglandin of the F (PGF) and E (PGE) groups. Blood samples were also obtained from the clinical cases for analysis of 13,14-dihydro-15-keto PGF (PGFM) the major metabolite of PGF. Pyometrial exudate from clinical cases of abattoir samples had high concentrations of PGF (17.9 ng/mL) and PGE (33.2 ng/mL) and the total amount of PGF and PGE in the uterus was calculated to be several hundred times as great as in normal cows. Furthermore, clinical cases had elevated PGFM in their blood compared to that of controls, which suggests that at least some of the PGF was being absorbed from the uterus. These results are discussed in light of our current understanding of the maternal recognition of pregnancy in cattle.

    Topics: Animals; Body Fluids; Cattle; Corpus Luteum Maintenance; Dinoprost; Female; Pregnancy; Prostaglandins; Prostaglandins E; Prostaglandins F; Puerperal Infection; Uterine Diseases; Uterus

1985