1. Relationship between electrical resistance of cervical mucus and ovarian steroid concentration at the time of artificial insemination in ewes
- Author
-
Theodora Tsiligianni, Georgios S. Amiridis, and E. Theodosiadou
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Radioimmunoassay ,Down-Regulation ,Andrology ,Endocrinology ,Pregnancy ,Internal medicine ,Electric Impedance ,medicine ,Retrospective analysis ,Animals ,Ovarian steroid ,Insemination, Artificial ,Progesterone ,Sheep, Domestic ,Estradiol ,Greece ,business.industry ,Artificial insemination ,Ovary ,Estrus synchronization ,Cervical mucus ,Cervix Mucus ,Linear Models ,Estrus Detection ,Female ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Estrus Synchronization ,business ,Animals, Inbred Strains ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to investigate whether fertile or non-fertile inseminations (AI) in synchronized ewes are correlated with the electrical resistance of cervical mucus (ERCM) and the ovarian steroid concentration. AIs were performed either at fixed-time (group A) or after estrus detection (group B). Retrospective analysis revealed that at AI, pregnant ewes had lower ERCM values and progesterone concentrations than non-pregnant ones (p < 0.05). It appears that ERCM may be used as an additional index for fertility enhancement of inseminated ewes.
- Published
- 2014