Abstract

Single blood samples from 106 pregnant and seven non-pregnant Karan Swiss cows and 104 pregnant and nine non-pregnant Murrah buffaloes were measured for oestrone and oestrone sulphate hormones by radioimmunoassay. Mean plasma oestrone level was below detection limit (< 2·5 pg/ml) in non-pregnant and 1 month pregnant cows and buffaloes. In cows the mean oestrone level fluctuated narrowly between 10·25 and 26·65 pg/ml between the second and eighth months of pregnancy, followed by a steep rise in the ninth and especially in the tenth month (151·24 pg/ml). In buffaloes mean oestrone concentrations were lower and fluctuated between 14·81 and 23·56 pg/ml during the second to ninth months of pregnancy, rising sharply in the tenth month to a peak of 47·37 pg/ml. Mean oestrone sulphate levels were below detection limit (< 16 pg/ml) during non-pregnancy, first and second months of pregnancy in cows, increasing sharply thereafter to a peak of 6401·38 pg/ml in the tenth month of pregnancy. In buffaloes, low mean levels of oestrone sulphate were recorded in the non-pregnant and up to the fourth month of pregnancy with the levels rising sharply thereafter to a peak of 6559·82 pg/ml in the tenth month. The hormone levels were not significantly different in the two species ( P > 0·01). The possibility of using oestrone sulphate measurement as a test of pregnancy confirmation has been indicated for both species.

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