Abstract

RU 486, a potent progesterone antagonist with high affinity for progesterone receptor, was used alone or in combination with relaxin in late pregnant cattle to determine its effect on induction of parturition. Cross-bred beef cattle were bred by artificial insemination. An indwelling cannula was inserted into a jugular vein on day 269 (expected term = day 283) for repeated blood sample collection. On day 277, the cattle were assigned randomly to three groups (n = 6 each): group 1 received RU 486 (2 mg/kg BW, im) at 0800 h on days 277 and 278; group 2 received the same RU 486 treatment plus 3000 U relaxin, injected sc at 0800 h on day 278; and group 3 served as controls and received vehicle injection. Parturition occurred 55 h after treatment in group 1 and 53 h after treatment in group 2 compared with 210 h in the controls (P less than 0.01). The calves from treated groups were vigorous at birth, and their birth weights (32 and 33 kg in groups 1 and 2) were less than those of control calves (38 kg; P less than 0.01). There was no incidence of difficult birth (dystocia) with RU 486 treatment compared with that in the controls. Placenta delivery averaged 6.5 h after birth in both RU 486-treated groups and did not differ from the control value (5 h). Plasma progesterone concentrations averaged 8.2 ng/ml during the pretreatment period for all animals. Progesterone started to decrease markedly by 1200 h on day 278, dropped to about 4 ng/ml by 2400 h that same day, and was at basal levels on day 279, the day of calving, in two hormone-treated groups. In sharp contrast, progesterone was maintained at about 6 ng/ml in placebo-treated controls during this period and did not decrease to basal levels until 2 days before parturition on day 286 (P less than 0.01). Peak RU 486 in plasma was 7.2 ng/ml after the first injection and 14.3 ng/ml after the second injection, and averaged 7.9 ng/ml on the day of induced calving (day 279). Peak relaxin was 4.1 ng/ml after hormone injection. The results indicate that RU 486 alone or combined with relaxin precisely controlled the time of parturition in cattle in late pregnancy. Such treatment can be used to facilitate parturition and increase survival rates of neonatal calves without detrimental effects of dystocia, retention of placenta, and delayed postpartum fertility.

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