Effect of stage of anestrus on the induction of estrus by the dopamine agonist cabergoline in dogs.
Beagle bitches were administered the dopamine D2 receptor agonist cabergoline in 3 groups of 5 animals each, starting on known days of the estrous cycle. Cabergoline treatment was started in either early anestrus (Days 93 to 108), mid-anestrus (Days 123 to 156), or late anestrus (Days 161 to 192) at doses of 5 ug/kg/d, per os, and was continued until the confirmation of induced proestrus or for 40 d. Reproductive parameters were compared with those in 5 control anestrous bitches (Days 90 to 150). In control bitches, the mean (+/- SEM) interval to the next proestrus (73+/-11 d) resulted in an interestrus interval (192+/-9 d) similar to that of the previous cycles (196+/-11 d). In 14 of the 15 cabergoline-treated bitches, the next proestrus occurred within 4 to 30 d, was premature in early and mid-anestrous bitches and developed with low variability within groups. The resulting intervals to proestrus in bitches treated with cabergoline in early anestrus (20+/-2 d), mid-anestrus (14+/-3 d) and late anestrus (6+/-1 d) resulted in interestrus intervals in those groups of 131+/-5, 166+/-7 and 196+/-2 d, respectively. In response to treatment, interestrus intervals were reduced (P<0.05) and more synchronous (P<0.05) in early and mid-anestrus bitches, and were more synchronous (P<0.05) in late-anestrous bitches compared with those of control bitches or those of the previous cycle. Periovulatory estradiol and progesterone profiles of induced cycles in treated bitches were similar to those of spontaneous cycles in control bitches. Four of 5 control bitches and 12 of the 14 responding cabergoline-treated bitches became pregnant and produced normal litters. Plasma prolactin concentrations at Days 2 and 5 of treatment (0.3+/-0.1 ng/mL) and at the onset of proestrus shortly before the end of treatment (0.4+/-0.1 ng/mL) were lower (P<0.05) than those present in anestrus prior to treatment (1.7+/-0.6 ng/mL) or in control bitches. Prolactin was also low at the onset of proestrus in control bitches (0.5+/-0.2 ng/mL). The results demonstrate that prolactin-lowering doses of the dopamine agonist cabergoline can terminate the normal obligate anestrus in dogs, and that the effect occurs more slowly in early anestrus than in mid or late anestrus.[1]References
- Effect of stage of anestrus on the induction of estrus by the dopamine agonist cabergoline in dogs. Verstegen, J.P., Onclin, K., Silva, L.D., Concannon, P.W. Theriogenology (1999) [Pubmed]
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