Abstract

Cyclic ewes were treated with 500-mg progesterone-impregnated sponges for the synchronization of oestrus. In the first experiment, the sponges were removed from 79 ewes at intervals over a 17-day treatment and the residual amount of progesterone was measured in order to assess the rate of absorption of the hormone from the sponges by the animals. The residual progesterone was found to decrease linearly with the duration of sponge insertion but there was also a significant quadratic component indicative of a slowing down in the rate of progesterone absorption towards the end of the treatment period. In the second experiment, 13 cyclic ewes were treated with 500-mg progesterone sponges for 17 days and the eight ewes in oestrus following spongewithdrawal were mated. The peripheral plasma progesterone was assayed at intervals during sponge insertion and at weekly intervals after sponge withdrawal. The residual progesterone levels on the sponges and the plasma progesterone levels of the treated ewes were examined in relation to their oestrous response and fertility. There was a significantly higher residual level of hormone remaining on sponges from ewes that mated than on sponges from those that did not (P < 0.01). The 13 ewes exhibited luteal phase levels of plasma progesterone when assayed during the period of sponge insertion regardless of their response to treatment. The mated, fertile ewes had significantly higher plasma hormone levels than the non-mated and the mated infertile ewes, after sponge withdrawal.

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