Abstract

Two experiments were conducted to test the efficacy of altrenogest treatment in mares. The response to 15-d altrenogest treatment (Experiment 1) was characterized in 20 mares that were given 22 mg daily of altrenogest in oil (n = 10) or in gel (n = 10) from Day 10 to 25 after ovulation. In 17 mares, luteolysis occurred during altrenogest treatment (Day 17.7 ± 0.5), while 2 mares retained their corpus luteum (CL), and 1 mare had a diestrous ovulation on Day 16, resulting in a prolonged luteal phase. Ten of the 17 mares in which the CL had spontaneously regressed returned to estrus after the end of treatment, and ovulated 5.7 ± 0.8 d after the end of altrenogest treatment. Two of these 17 mares ovulated 2 and 3 d after the end of altrenogest treatment but ovulation was not accompanied by estrous behavior, and 5 mares ovulated during altrenogest treatment resulting in an interovulatory interval of 22.4 ± 1.1 d (range: 20 to 25d). Five mares which ovulated during altrenogest treatment and 2 mares which ovulated during silent estrus after the end of altrenogest treatment failed to regress the CL around 14 d post ovulation, and had a prolonged luteal phase. In Experiment 2, the effect of altrenogest administered from luteolysis to ovulation on duration of the subsequent luteal period was analyzed. In 6 mares altrenogest was begun on Day 14 post ovulation and continued until the hCG-induced ovulation. The interval from ovulation during altrenogest treatment to spontaneous luteolysis was 45.6 ± 2.4 d (range: 40 to 54d) in altrenogest-treated mares and was significantly longer than in 10 untreated control mares (14.5 ± 0.3 d, range: 13 to 16d). The results suggest that the oil and gel altrenogest preparations are equally effective in modulating estrous behavior and time to estrus and ovulation. Altrenogest treatment started late in diestrus appears to result in a high incidence of ovulation during treatment and when luteolysis and ovulation occur during treatment; the subsequent luteal phase is frequently prolonged due to failure of regression of the CL.

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