Abstract
First litter sows in naturally occurring post-weaning estrus were hand mated to proven boars and were fed a diet supplemented with zearalenone, an estrogenic mycotoxin (1 mg zearalenone/kg body weight), or a control diet on days 7 through 10 after mating. Embryos (blastocysts) and endometrial biopsies were collected from control and treated sows on days 9, 11, and 13 after mating. All blastocysts harvested on day 9 were spherical; treatment of sows with zearalenone had no effect on blastocyst development. Blastocysts collected from treated sows on day 11 were in stages of elongation comparable to those of blastocysts from control sows but had mild degenerative changes in the embryonic disks, characterized by slightly retarded development and an increase in the number of necrotic cells. Blastocysts collected from treated sows on day 13 were in an advanced stage of degeneration, characterized by circumferential constrictive division, fragmentation, and degeneration and disorganization of the embryonic disk. Feeding zearalenone to pregnant sows had no effect on the normal decrease in height of the endometrial luminal epithelium on days 9 through 13 after mating and no effect on morphologic appearance of secretory vesicles in the endometrial glandular epithelium. The dosage scheme of zearalenone used in this study did not cause any morphologic changes in the endometrium that could be associated with hyperestrogenism.
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