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Tuesday, January 08, 2002
DrHutch: Good evening!
PCFFasDog: Good evening and thank you all for
being here! We are very excited to welcome Dr. Robert Van Hutchison to our
first Canine Reproduction Seminar.
This free seminar is sponsored by Veterinary Perinatal
Specialties, Inc., home of the WhelpWise service. Please visit their website at
http://www.whelpwise.com
, and show your support for their sponsorship of this event!
Many of you already know Dr. Hutchison or have seen him
speak in person. He is one of the leading canine reproduction experts in the
world, and a favorite speaker at specialties and dog club events all over the
country. It's a great honor for us to welcome him here tonight.
Dr. Hutch is a Reproduction and Genetics consultant for
the Veterinary Information Network, and is co-director of the Animal Clinic
Northview, Inc., in North Ridgeville, Ohio.
He is also the president of the International Canine
Semen Bank of Ohio, and advisor for College of Veterinary Medicine students
interested in small animal theriogenology from Ohio State University, Virginia
Tech, Purdue, Tufts, and Michigan State University.
Dr. Hutch is the author of many articles on canine
reproduction in various breed journals and magazines, including "Canine Frozen
Semen," "Improving the Odds of Having Healthy Puppies," "Treatment of
Pyometritis in the Bitch Using Prostaglandin F - a Hypo-thyroidism," and
"Female Reproduction." Dr. Hutch will open with a few remarks and then he will
take your questions. To ask a question, just click on "AskDrHutch" in the right
hand column, type your question, and hit "send."
If you have problems during the chat, just click on any
of the names that begin with "@PCF" then type the question and hit "send."
I am very happy now to turn the seminar over to Dr.
Hutch!
DrHutch: What a wonderful way to spend a winter
evening! I thank everyone for their interest in canine reproduction. I
especially want to thank Karen Copley and Whelpwise for their sponsorship and
Christie Keith from VIN for her help.
For those that do not know me, I am tall, extremely
handsome with wavy dark hair. For those of you who do know me, yes, I am still
short, bald and dumpy! I do want to thank those who have attended my
repro/pediatric seminars for their kind words on the message posts. Your
questions have been excellent and very stimulating. I hope to cover as many as
possible this evening.
For us to understand canine reproduction, we must
realize that the canine, and especially the bitch, is a unique individual when
compared to all other domestic species. While most animals ovulate into an
estrogen bath, the bitch ovulates into a progesterone environment. This fact is
why we cannot use estrogen testing, vaginal smears or breeding guns for other
than general timing of the bitch's estrous cycle.
The use of frozen semen and fresh-cooled semen showed us
the true facts of canine breeding. Many testing methods that seemed to work
only appeared so due to the extreme long life of fresh semen in the bitch.
I always pictured Mother Nature looking at us dog
breeders and saying "those poor, poor fools. They don't have a clue what they
are doing!" Progesterone testing has allowed us to anticipate ovulation,
determine whelping dates and to schedule planned c-sections months in advance.
Interpreting progesterone levels, unfortunately is still
a mystery to many veterinarians and breeders. With these facts in place let's
talk about your problems, concerns and interests!
Question: When you say "The use of frozen semen and
fresh-cooled semen showed us the true facts of canine breeding. Many testing
methods that seemed to work only appeared so due to the extreme long life of
fresh semen in the bitch," what do you mean?
DrHutch: Basically, fresh semen lasts 5-6 days.
Colorado state has found live semen ELEVEN days after breeding. This made up
for a lot of our mistakes. Once we started using fresh cooled and semen, which
last only a few days or hours, suddenly things that seemed to work in the past
no longer seemed to work. Now with prosterone testing, we can get 83 percent
conception rates with FROZEN semen....
Question: Bitches who keep missing.
Several people asked a variation of this question:
I have tried a number of times to breed my bitch, both
with natural breedings and with AIs. She has missed repeatedly. Where do you
start when trying to understand and resolve this problem?
DrHutch: Basically there are only SIX reasons a
bitch misses, and we run around testing thyroid and doing cultures, which are
really only minimal reasons for failure.
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First, is the male sperm good.
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Second, did she ovlulate.
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Three, was semen put in at the right time.
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Four, did semen get to egg.
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Five, did fertilized egg implant.
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Six, did placenta develop enough to maintain (the
pregnancy).
We have to work our way through the list to determine
what the cause was. What we do is, first of all, have the male semen evaluated.
That is NOT saying there is a drop of sperm on the slide, there is sperm or no
sperm.
Normal sperm evaluations consist of 10 million sperm per
pound of body weight, 80 percent motility, less than 20 percent abnormal, and
if your male sperm meets those criteria, probably it's not the problem.
The other five problems have to do with the bitch
herself, and progesterone testing the DAY of ovulation is the day her
progesterone goes above 5 nanograms. Even though she has this three week-plus
heat cycle, there is a three to four day window we have to hit that varies from
bitch to bitch. With progesterone testing, we can be sure the semen is put in
at the proper time no matter what type of insemination method we are using.
In the bitch, the semen is pumped up into the
uterus....so outside ties... poorly done AIs... that don't deposit the semen in
the cervix, which is located in the abdomen above the bladder, prevent sement
from being drawn up into the uterus.
As bitches age, they get cysts within their uterus which
can obstruct the pathway - a good reason in an older bitch for considering a
surgical insemination.
Conception takes place in the Fallopian Tubes regardless
of the method of insemination.
An older bitch is any bitch over 5, by the way; several
of you asked.
The fertilized eggs are then released into the uterus,
but don't implant until day 17-18 after ovulation. So if there are uterine
lining problems, we either don't have implantation OR...the placenta, which
actually grows into the lining of the uterus, can't grow or be maintained, and
the puppies are reabsorbed. It will develop as the night goes on, how to detect
some of these problems.
When a bitch ovulates, whether we breed her, don't breed
her, or pretend she's not in season, the progesterone HAMMERS the uterine
lining for sixty-plus days.
The progesterone level is NOT affected by pregnancy. In
the cow for example, if the uterus does not get communication from the
fertilized egg by day 16, the whole process starts over again. In the bitch,
you don't have that luxury.
Even though the bitch's body produces the progesterone,
the progesterone is inflammatory to the uterine lining, so that after a heat
cycle, the bitch's uterus is never as healthy as it was before the heat cycle.
So we go from a normal uterus... and this start's with the first cycle of her
life...to an endometritis to endometrial hyperplasia, which some of you have
been asking about - this is when the uterus starts to thicken and we start to
get bubbles in the lining of the uterus - these changes affect the uterine
lining so much so that eventually the uterus cannot control the bacteria, and
the ultimate end stage is pyometritis.
So, in the bitch... So breeding back to back... or even
back to back to back to back....this is WHY it's such a crime we don't have
Cheque drops on the market now, to preserve the bitch's uterine lining.
Several of you have asked when they will be back on the
market....one company promised by this spring.
Pyometritis is a hormonal disease, of which the
infection is only secondary. Cheque drops is a wonderful product.... that was
Miberolone...a male hormone derivative that could safely delay a bitch coming
in season for up to two years. Ovaban is a different product, same as human
Megace. These are progesterone products, the exact hormone we are trying to
preserve our uteruses from.We should NEVER use ovaban or megace in a bitch we
want to breed in the future.
Cheque drops are NOT progesterone.We could show bitches,
we could field trial bitches, and still have a uterus that was only 2-3 years
old in a five year old bitch!Cheque drops preserve and promote fertility by
preserving the uterine lining.
The average bitch after going off Cheque drops came in
after 70 days. The biggest problem is they had to be given every day.
Pyo is EXTREMELY rare in a young bitch; remember,
bitches do not go into menopause. Only humans and gorillas do.When a bitch's
reproductive life is over she should be spayed.It's very good to spay an older
bitch, because the uterus is always going to be hammered by progesterone every
heat cycle.
Side effects from Cheque drops: One percent tear from
the eyes; they tend to muscle up and get more coat, because it's a male hormone
derivative. The biggest misunderstood side effect, however, was mucous around
the vulva... like a puppy vaginitis.
Unfortunately, many veterinarians diagnose any goop
around the vulva as pyometritis. Cheque drops PREVENTED pyometritis by
protecting the uterine lining. Cheque drops were only removed from the market
because they were not profitable enough. There was no medical reason.
Case History, STUD DOG:
Proven stud dog who was recently diagnosed as being
sterile. .He is being treated for a prostate infection using Orbax 68mg for 2
weeks. Vet found prostate normal on exam but lots of bright red blood in semen.
Will we be able to restore fertility? Thoughts?
DrHutch: Male dogs age the same as human males
age... with a change in the type testosterone being produced from the
testicles.
One of the effects in the dog is benign prostatic
hyperplasia (bigger prostate). This is a routine happening in all males over
six years of age, being especially prominent in the Doberman.
Unfortunately, it is misdiagnosed as an infectious
process by many veterinarians. So they often times are treated by antibiotics,
often with no subsequent improvement with often the drastic suggestion that the
male be neutered. The PROPER treatment is one of hormone therapy, using one of
two products: either Ovaban, that dreaded product we wouldn't use in the bitch,
or Proscar, which is finasteride, which is a human product.
These work by countering the change of the testosterone
causing the prostate to shrink back down to a normal size, stopping the
bleeding, making the dog reproductively normal. A dog with a prostate INFECTION
will have PUS in the ejaculate, not blood. A dog with a true prostate infection
runs a fever, or shows many of the signs of a bitch with pyometritis. Prostatic
cancers do occur in the dog, but are more common in neutered dogs than in
non-neutered dogs.
Question: Is is safe to breed a bitch the next season
after stopping the Cheque?
DrHutch: Absolutely. It's suggested not to skip
a season, because we have been preserving the uterus from the effects of
progesterone; what would be the benefit of exposing her uterus to two monts of
progesterone?
Progesterone's effect on the uterine lining is the
reason why bitches six and over have a 33.3 percent less chance of conceiving
than bitches under 6 years of age.
Back to the case study.... neutering does not cause
prostatic cancer....but it does not prevent it.
I'm getting many questions on Ovaban.
Ovaban will decrease the amount of blood and prostatic
fluid, not actually INCREASE sperm. The treatment is a daily treatment for 3
weeks; after that once a week indefinitely. It's a control medication
countering the aging and hormonal changes of the testicle.
80 percent of a dog's sperm production is based on the
size of their testicles; that's where we get the 10 million per pound of body
weight. Changes can take place due to cortisol, from STRESS... we don't
appreciate the effect of stress on the reproductive health of our dogs.
Interestingly THYROID has little to do with the reproductive health of our dogs
(males)a study at Michigan State took male dogs and completely destroyed their
thyroid and found it had no effect on sperm production.
The thyroid is probably not a consideration in a dog
with a low sperm count. We should look for hormonal problems in the body,
infection problems in the body. And in many dogs, immune and genetic problems.
Thyroid in bitches also has very little importance in
reproduction. The main sign of a reproduction problem related to female
hypothyroid is they don't come in season. There is no proven benefit of giving
thyroid to a normal thyroid individual, reproductively. My main concern with
thyroid, depending on which of the three types of hypothyroidism it is, is the
immune-mediated type has genetic implications.
If they have even SOME thyroid, that is probably all
that is needed to maintain a pregnancy. Studies out of Florida show bitches
with even ZERO thyroid function, did have trouble maintaining a pregnancy and
had a type of dwarf puppy, but bitches with ANY thyroid function, that come
into season, thyroid will probably not cause any further problems.
So once you've proven your bitch's thyroid is normal,
there is no reason to be going to six different veterinarians to have her
retested. Save your money, take Dr. Hutchison to lunch
Question: What about the dreaded mycoplasma?
DrHutch: Unfortunately, an article published in
the early 90s blamed mycoplasma for infertility in males, bitches aborting
their puppies, husbands fooling around with their secretaries.
We as dog people jumped on this like there was no
tomorrow. Mycoplasma is a normal organism at all body openings. A routine
culture of a bitch's vaginal tract will show strep, staph, e coli, pastuerella,
and mycoplasma. The vaginal tract is not sterile so routine culturing of a
normal, healthy bitch is totally unwarranted.
You need to appreciate the purpose of normal flora or
normal bacteria: they keep the BAD bugs out so a routine culture, that shows
mycoplasma, e coli, and strep, is not a cause for treatment but a cause for
celebration because the bitch is normal
Question: What about bitches who did not become
pregnant before antibiotics, but do afterward?
DrHutch: Putting on bitches on antibiotics
pre-breeding actually makes them more prone to infectious disease by killing
normal organisms, especially when we use the GOOD drugs like Baytril.
Occasionally, we may see a bitch with an infection... but there will be signs
of that infection - redness, abnormal discharge, smelling - just like if you
have an infection in your ear, you're not going to not know it. Bacteria does
not equal infection.
When we see problems with mycoplasma, for example, it is
not the mycoplasma that caused the problem. Mycoplasma only took the
opportunity of the infection, just the same as the staph on the skin causes a
hot spot because the dog has fleas, for example. Most of the individuals that
see who do have mycoplasma infection, would not have been prevented by a
routine culture, as the primary problem was stress, steroids, or other types of
immune deficiency. They are only secondary problems. Something like pyometritis
is not caused by routine bacteria; the normal bacteria were allowed to flare up
by the inflammation of the uterine lining
Question: Isn't it true that an e coli infection can be
passed to the puppies in the birth canal, causing fading puppies and the loss
of the whole litter?
DrHutch: In normal healthy puppies, no. Think
of puppies like the lions surrounding the antelopes looking for the weak ones.
If a puppy is stressed, unhealthy, otherwise compromised, then the e coli can
flare up but it's not because we allowed the e coli to be there, it's because
we allowed the puppy to be uhhealthy.
We cannot sterilize vaginal tracts no matter how many
antibiotics we give because air goes in, air goes out. Just because there is
vaginal bacteria does not mean there is intrauterine bacteria (bacteria in the
uterus).
I want to say I LOVE LOVE LOVE these questions!
New question: Can't these bacteria be transmitted to
the stud dog?
DrHutch: The male HAS all of these organism, so
no, they are NOT contagious. This is why one of the most absolute crazy things
I have ever heard of, is people treating their whole kennel because they had
one dog with mycoplasma. This would be the equivalent of treating your whole
kennel because one dog had a hot spot. Every dog has this. It's not contagious.
Brucellosis.... is a whole other world.
Brucellosis is NOT a normal organism of the male or the
female. Brucellosis is a very serious disease that all bitches should be tested
for every time they are going to be bred, and males should be tested for every
six months if they only breed a negative female.
Brucella bacteria can be passed through all body
discharges, not just through breeding, so even individuals that have never been
bred but who have been to a show, a kennel, a field trial, need to have a
negative brucellosis test.
Brucellosis is not common, but because it is extremely
deadly... I myself consulted with a kennel a few years ago who put down 26 dogs
because of an infected male they brought in. It is a serious disease which is
primarily associated in the bitches with aborting puppies, and in the male
causing inflammation of the testicles and subsequent infertility.
It is at this point not curable to the point of
returning to reproduction. Do not wait until the last minute to have your
brucella test run becasue the slide test run by veterinarians in their office,
actually made from sheep brucellosis, one dog out of five has a false positive.
Even with AIs, you can protect the male, but not the
female, from a dog who has brucella. Because you put the prostatic fluid and
ejaculate into the bitch, along with the brucella. When we freeze semen, it is
critical to us to be certain the male is negative for brucellosis, so we aren't
preserving these bacteria for a thousand years!
Most dogs (with brucellosis) do not have to be put down,
but they must be neutered and put on antibiotics for 4-5 years. And it is
transmissable to humans too.
These questions are SO GREAT... they are fabulous!
Question: Herpes?
DrHutch: Herpes is not the same as brucellosis.
It is part of the kennel cough complex. Any dog who has been to a show or a
training class probably has herpes virus. Herpes virus is common. That is why
it is rare having a problem with it. Herpes virus is only deadly to puppies
during the first three weeks of life, because a newborn puppy's average body
temperature does not reach 100 degrees until 3 weeks of age. If the bitch has
never been exposed to herpes, and has no antibodies to pass through the
colostrum to the puppies, the puppies could be affected.
Once a bitch has a litter with herpes, she will have the
antibodies to pass through the colostrum to the next puppies, so they will be
protected. Many people believe that a bitch should be taken to shows etc so
they are exposed and have the protection to pass on to their puppies.
Puppies can be infected in utero, through the vaginal
tract, or by other dogs coming to sneeze on them. Isolation is a good idea for
the first three weeks.
Treatment for herpes: raise the body temperature to 100
degrees, herpes goes from being a deadly to virus to causing nothing more than
a minor cough.
Question: Comparing AI methods
Can you compare the success rates of fresh chilled vs.
frozen semen, and surgical implant vs AI vs transcervical insemination?
DrHutch: The type of insemination method
depends on two things: Age of the bitch and health of the semen you put in.
Unfortunately, a misnomer exists that the transcervical insemination replaces
surgical insemination. This is totally false. Transcervical insemination
improves upon VAGINAL artificial insemination, it does not replace the
surgical.
In a regular AI, vaginal, the semen is deposited at the
entrance to the cervix, the tie is simulated. often by taking a rubber glove
and stroking the vaginal tract, which causes oxytocin release. which causes the
semen to be pumped up to the uterus. So we know compromised (frozen) semen,
which is weaker and will only live about 12 hours, needs to be deposited into
the uterus. Conceptions rates from frozen semen put in vaginally are 11 percent
Conception rates from frozen semen put into the uterus are 83 percent.
The transcervical is taking an endoscope, visualizing
the entrance to the cervix, and putting a catheter through the cervix and
putting the semen into the uterus. It does not require anesthetic; the bitch
just stands there. In our practice we just watch it on television... better
than watching Oprah.
The drawback to a transcervical insemination is you
don't get a chance to evaluate the uterus. In a surgical insemination, I have
the uterus in my hand. I can feel for cysts, I can visualize where to put the
semen. In many cases, by breaking down cysts, I can take conception rates from
zero percent to 100 percent.
Using fresh semen in a young bitch is still a regular
vaginal AI. Compromised semen which is either poor quality semen, fresh cooled
semen, or frozen semen, in a young bitch, should be transcervical insemination.
Using poor quality semen in a bitch 4 and a half to five years or older, you
want to do a surgical insemination so the uterus can be evaluated.
A surgical insemination is always your greatest chance
of having puppies.
Question: Do we need to spin down the semen for a
transcervical insemination?
DrHutch: Since the uterus only holds less than
a teaspoon, we will oftentimes centrifuge the semen so that the whole volume
will stay in the uterus rather than running out through the cervix.
Because the cervix is open in a bitch in season,
bacteria can go back and forth into the uterus, so the transcervical
insemination does NOT introduce more bacteria than normal into the uterus, no
matter which insemination is used, including natural.
Conception occurs from all of these in the same place,
the Fallopian tubes, so the method of insemination does not alter the location
of the puppies in the uterus, the lack of ease of delivery, or positioning of
the puppies.
Question: What part of the ejaculate is the semen in?
DrHutch: The male ejaculates in three distinct
fractions. The first fraction just cleans the pipes. The second fraction
contains the sperm; that's the part that should look milky and thick. You stop
collecting when you see the prostatic fluid, which looks like water. Volume is
not important; no one has a trophy for collecting a quart of dog semen.
Question: How is a surgical AI done?
DrHutch: A surgical insemination is a minor
procedure that is done under an anesthetic. I use propofol and sevothane, the
same anesthetics we use for c-sections, for our surgical Ais. The procedure
lasts approximately ten minutes. I make an incision into the abdomen, like a
mini mini spay incision - unless I sneeze, then it gets bigger - then I isolate
the uterus in my hand. The semen is injected into the uterus using a 22 guage
needle, the same size needle used for vaccine. This will not negatively impact
future breedings.
It is SO COOL because I can see the uterus fill with the
semen; it's like watching the Discovery Channel.
I put in three stiches, five staples, the whole
procedure from the time she walks in the door is less than an hour.
Question: How long does frozen semen last, stored?
DrHutch: Frozen semen lasts stored, probably
forever. It uses minimal energy when it's stored in the liquid nitrogen at
minus 322 degrees F. We had a litter recently from semen that had been stored
25 years, it looked just as good as the day it was frozen. It was great to see
the sperm swimming around again, happy to be warm!
The way we package our frozen semen is by the number of
normal live sperm cells per dose. A dog with a great sperm count may get
multiple multiple breedings out of each collection... a dog with lower sperm
count may get one. We calculate our dose so that each breeding has a set number
of live normal sperm, rather than by volume or by a set number.
Question: When there is a poor semen sample, is there a
way to isolate the viable sperm?
DrHutch: We don't worry about the abnormal
sperm, other than mathematically eliminating them, because abnormal sperm does
not cause abnormal puppies, so there is no reason to eliminate them
Question: Oxytocin (Pit shots).
Can you discuss the proper use of oxytocin injections
during whelping? It seems that many breeders use oxytocin early on in the
whelping process, when they feel it isn't progressing fast enough.
DrHutch: A puppy in the uterus has only two
elements maintaining its oxygenation and life, one being the heartrate of the
puppy, two being the blood pressure from mom to the uterus.
The whole goal in whelping is to maintain vital
elements. Oxytocin I use in a very specific manner. If you've gone three hours
without a puppy, I use one dose of oxytocin. My dose of oxytocin is two units
per ten pounds of body weight. Oxytocin is normally 20 units per ml; I never
use more than half an ml, no matter how big the bitch is.
I give one injection; if nothing happens, I give a
second injection 20 minutes later. If nothing happens, I go to a C-section.
If you get too much oxytocin at a time, you will cause
the puppies not to be expelled from the uterus but shrunk wrapped IN the
uterus. The two injections of oxytocin actually increase the blood pressure to
uterus which is beneficial to the puppies. If we keep giving them, we LOWER the
blood pressure to the uterus, which robs the puppies of oxygen.
Using calcium with the oxytocin... now that we can
monitor calcium levels in our practice I do not normally give calcium if the
bitch is normal, because it causes the heart to slow down. If I need to give
calcium I now use Calsorb, an oral gel that is absorbed almost as quickly as
injectable. I can give it in small amounts more often, and don't have to worry
about the side effects of injected calcium.
To clarify, my standard protocol (with oxytocin) is two
injections; if two don't do it, two, four, ten, twenty, is not going to do it.
In most cases I keep score by how many live puppies I deliver, not how many
C-sections I avoid. I wait three hours from the last puppy.
My signs of dystocia are:
Temp just before labor readjusts back up to normal;
If I have no puppy born in four hours.
That is my definition of primary uterine inertia.
Straining hard for an hour... that is when you would NOT
give oxytocin. Longer than three hours between puppies, that's when you DO give
oxytocin.
Any black, red, or green discharge before any puppies
are delivered indicates placental detachment and needs attention.
Ultrasounds, fetal monitoring devices, are critical to
determine fetal well being. The ability to monitor the fetal heart rate is
essential with WhelpWise or having an ultrasound.
I have worked and consulted with breeders using
WhelpWise; it's ESPECIALLY important if a veterinarian does not have
ultrasound, because there is no other way to monitor the whelps and fetal
health
Question: What is WhelpWise?
DrHutch: WhelpWise is the sponsor of this
event, actually... it is a fetal monitoring service. You can monitor your
bitch's labor progression and fetal heart beat at home. They work well with
your veterinarian. They are at
http://www.whelpwise.com
. Thank you Karen! Karen Copely, the owner and founder of WhelpWise.
I believe that we have the right to expect every puppy
that our bitch carries; I am not one who believes you get a litter because you
expect to throw one away. The ones we work the hardest on, often turn out to be
the best!
Question: Is there any reason to suspect ultrasound
causes reabsorption of puppies?
DrHutch: Ultrasounding is normally done day
26-28, when the heart starts beating on the puppy, so we can monitor viability
as well as pregnancy. Absorption can occur up until around day 37-38.
Now that we are ultrasounding, we are REALIZING that
absorption is not uncommon in the bitch, but ultrasound is only diagnosing it,
it's not causing it. Just as x-raying a bitch at day 52 does NOT cause
cataracts or whatever in the bitch; it gives us a WHALE of a lot of information
about how many pups, their size, their positioning , and their health. That is
an urban legend.
Absorption is most commonly caused when the uterus is
not able to support the placenta and give nutrition to the puppies; genetic
problems that stop the puppies from developing; there can be some viral of
infectious causes; there have been some toxins identified in large animals more
so than in small animals. Trauma probably plays no role, such as palpation or
jumping off the porch.
Question: Reliability of progesterone testing?
I have seen the progesterone testing of a bitch to
determine ideal breeding times, to be off by as much as three
days.....according to my stud dog...and the successful breeding LATER than the
test suggested. Care to comment on this???
DrHutch: It is best if one can obtain
progesterone numbers, which should not be a problem in this day and age.
Progesterone tests are not species specific, so can be run in human labs, dog
labs, horse labs.
The biggest mistake people make in running progesterone
tests is they stop before the progesterone goes above five nanograms. The day
the progesterone goes above five nanograms is the day of ovulation. The whole
world revolves around five nanograms. T
The fact that we could determine just the initial rise
(rise to 2-3 nanograms of progesterone) is a total fallacy. You must confirm
ovulation. I start testing around day 6 of the cycle. You need to run your
progesterone every 2-3 days.
Question: What is the most reliable in house test?
DrHutch: At this point, I recommend you find an
outside lab to give you a number, as opposed to running in house tests; they
are not as accurate.
Question: Doesn't the time lag cause a problem?
DrHutch: You should be able to get the results
back in 24 hours max. If there IS a time lag problem, check with a human
hospital, or if nothing else, overnight them to me! I can have them that same
afternoon!
Question: What about the LH surge?
DrHutch: Because the LH test has to be run
every day, and LH is species specific, and in most cases even running the LH we
still put most faith in the progesterone tests, I do not run the LH except in
very, very specific cases. And the bitches appreciate not being BLED every day
for 14 days in a row.... the urine LH is not successful.
Question: What about supplementing progesterone?
DrHutch: The bitch's sole source of
progesterone is the ovary. She does not switch the source of progesterone to
the placenta like the horse or the cat, therefore it is very uncommon for a
bitch to lose a litter due to a premature drop in progesterone.
Giving progesterone when it's not needed will cause
birth defects in the female puppies.
If we need to supplement progesterone, I use
progesterone in oil injections, as they do show up on progesterone tests, which
tells us when to give the next dose. There is an oral synthetic progesterone
called Regumate which is used on horses. It will not show up on progesterone
tests and therefore will not be monitored.
We only need 2 and one half nanograms of progesterone to
maintain a pregnancy. Most bitches during a pregnancy have 8-10 times that
amount. A bitch dropping from 20 nanograms to 15 nanograms would still have
plenty, and you would definitely not supplement.
I only supplement if the bitch drops lower than 5
nanograms and we have longer than 7 days to our anticipated due date
The bitch's due date, 63 days from her ovulation date,
the date she went above 5 nanograms progesterone. Breeding date has nothing to
do with whelping date It's the OVULATION date. So if you know the day your
bitch goes above 5 nanograms, you can set her due date at 63 days from that as
her whelping date: set up your whelping box, take the day off work.
Question: After progesterone reaches 5 nanograms, what
are the best days for breeding?
DrHutch: The bitch ovulates an immature egg
that has to mature for 48 hours before it can be fertilized. The breeding
depends on the anticpated life of semen. A natural breeding can be done the day
of 5 nanograms, the day after... the life of the semen is going to cover it.
The fresh cooled semen should be 48 hours after 5 nanograms. Frozen, we breed
72 hours after 5 nanograms, because frozen semen only lives 12 hours. Slightly
later is better than slightly early because you want the egg to be ready to be
fertilized.
Question: Dr. Hutchison, are we intervening too much
and harming our breeds with all these AIs, surgical inseminations, etc?
DrHutch: I don't believe that ignoring
technicological advances, advances our breeding. I believe anything we can do
to make breeding successful, like using frozen semen... is good. Anything we
can do to improve our dog breeding and have more live, healthy puppies,
interventions in safe, healthy manners, can only be a positive.
I think the Cornell study that showed you get more live
puppies from a c-section, showed us that intervention can be a benefit by
saving those normal puppies who by some reason cannot get through the birthing
process.
Being able to go back to breed to frozen semen from a
dog from 25 years ago can only be a positive thing, bringing some of those lost
traits back into our lines Plus I need to do this, I have a high maintanance
wife.
There were so many great questions, but we have just run
out of time... we will have more information in a follow up email... but I just
love you guys - you ask the best and the greatest questions and I would like to
get to each and every one of them.
So many exciting things lie ahead for us dog breeders.
Embryo transfer, in-vitro fertilization, frozen ova to name a few. Yet, I
always am amazed at the number of people, especially veterinarians, critical of
us for wanting to breed our bitches. They blame us for the great pet
over-population problems, like breeding uncontrolled, mixed breeds is our goal.
Go forth, improve your breeds, and good luck on your
next litter, it may contain the best one ever!!
Thank you, Thank you, Thank you!!! Good night.
PCFFasDog: The Pet Care Forum and Veterinary
Information Network thank all of you for attending this event tonight, and hope
you enjoyed it. We especially want to thank Dr. Hutch for giving so generously
of this time and information, and of course, to thank Veterinary Perinatal
Specialties at
http://www.whelpwise.com for their
sponsorship. This event would not have been possible without them!
Goodnight and thank you again!
DrHutch: Thanks everyone!
Dr. Hutchison gives his permission for dog clubs to
reprint this article in their club newsletters or publications provided the
following statement is included:
Copyright 2002 by Dr. Robert Hutchison and the
Veterinary Information Network, Inc. Used with permission. All rights reserved.
Dr. Van Hutchison can be reached at Animal Clinic Northview, Inc., 34910 Center
Ridge Rd., North Ridgeville, Ohio 44039; (440) 327-8282.
Date Published: 8/19/2002 1:42:00 PM
Date Revised: 12/30/2002
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