Abstract

A study was undertaken to evaluate the effects of using an oral progestagen for synchronisation of parturition in the sow. Multiparous Landrace X Large White sows were fed 20 mg allyl trenbolone daily from day 110 to 115 of gestation then 15 mg on day 116 (Group R; N = 12); untreated sows of similar background served as controls (Group C; N = 9). Blood samples, taken at 8-h intervals from day 110 of gestation to onset of parturition, then every 4 h until parturition was complete, were assayed for plasma levels of progesterone, unconjugated oestrone, cortisol and prolactin. Duration of farrowing, incidence of stillbirths and individual piglet birth weights were recorded. Five Group R sows farrowed during the period of progestagen administration, while for the remaining 7, the mean interval from last progestagen treatment to emergence of first piglet was 31.6 ±5.5 h. Gestation length, duration of parturition, and mean interval between successive births all were longer in Group R than in Group C (116.5 ± 0.34 compared with 115.0 ± 0.52 days, P < 0.01; 9.73 ± 1.98 compared with 3.08 ± 0.70 h, P < 0.01; and 53.4 ± 10.2 compared with 16.2 ± 2.4 min., P < 0.01, respectively). No significant treatment differences were apparent for litter size at birth, proportion stillborn or piglet birth weights. Profile analysis showed that plasma progesterone levels in Group R were lower ( P < 0.05) during the 30 h prefarrowing, suggesting a longer mean interval between functional luteolysis and parturition in these animals. In both Groups plasma levels of unconjugated oestrone rose in the prefarrowing period, the levels being higher ( P < 0.05) in Group R Peak oestrone levels occurred at the commencement of, and had declined to low levels by the completion of, farrowing. Cortisol levels exhibited a pattern similar to that of oestrone, although peak levels at parturition were lower in Group R ( P < 0.01). Plasma prolactin levels in the 24 h prepartum rose faster and reached higher levels ( P < 0.05) in Group C than Group R, but the difference was no longer apparent subsequent to first piglet emergence. It is concluded that the use of this progestagen to delay parturition upset the synchronisation of endocrine events at farrowing, resulting in an increased duration of parturition.

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