Evaluation of different techniques for pregnancy diagnosis in sheep

2009 
Abstract Fifty Corriedale ewes were used in this study to evaluate pregnancy diagnosis in sheep. Ewes were bred under a pen mating system and pregnancy diagnosis was initiated from day 15 post-mating, applying the diagnostic techniques of trans-abdominal real-time B-mode ultrasonography, Preg-alert (A-mode ultrasonography), the Doppler ultrasonic fetal pulse detector or the plasma progesterone concentration assay (EIA). These tests were repeated fortnightly on all the ewes until the onset of lambing. The accuracy of trans-abdominal real-time B-mode ultrasonography (68%) at days 15–30 of pregnancy increased to 100% by days 61–75 and remained constant until lambing. The accuracy of the Preg-alert (56%) diagnosis at days 31–45 increased to 94% by days 91–105 of gestation and then decreased to 82% from days 136 of gestation to lambing. The accuracy of both the Doppler ultrasound (56%) at days 31–45 and plasma progesterone assay (98%) at days 15–30 of gestation increased to 100% at days 76–90 and 46–60 of gestation, respectively and remained constant until parturition. The mean plasma progesterone concentration at days 0–6 (1.41 ± 0.21 ng/ml) increased to 4.0 ± 0.87 ng/ml at days 16–30 (days 18.23 ± 0.78) post-mating. Animals returning to estrus recorded less than 1 ng/ml at days 18.23 ± 0.78 post-mating. The accuracy of both the B-mode ultrasonic technique (78%) and plasma progesterone assay (98%) was significantly higher ( P
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