Equine alpha-fetoprotein levels in Lipizzaner mares with normal pregnancies and with pregnancy loss

Alpha-fetoprotein has proved to be a good indicator of fetal well-being in human medicine for decades. Although this molecule is present in most of the mammalian species including horses, reference values in healthy and high-risk pregnant mares have not yet been published. The aim of the present stu...

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Veröffentlicht in:Theriogenology 2015-12, Vol.84 (9), p.1581-1586
Hauptverfasser: Vincze, Boglárka, Gáspárdy, András, Kulcsár, Margit, Baska, Ferenc, Bálint, Ádám, Hegedűs, György Tamás, Szenci, Ottó
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container_end_page 1586
container_issue 9
container_start_page 1581
container_title Theriogenology
container_volume 84
creator Vincze, Boglárka
Gáspárdy, András
Kulcsár, Margit
Baska, Ferenc
Bálint, Ádám
Hegedűs, György Tamás
Szenci, Ottó
description Alpha-fetoprotein has proved to be a good indicator of fetal well-being in human medicine for decades. Although this molecule is present in most of the mammalian species including horses, reference values in healthy and high-risk pregnant mares have not yet been published. The aim of the present study was to determine whether equine alpha-fetoprotein (eqAFP) is a good indicator of complicated pregnancies in Lipizzaner mares. A total of 111 serum samples from 30 mares have been analyzed for eqAFP levels throughout gestation (Days 60–325). After the pregnancy was confirmed, 23 mares had normal pregnancies with viable foals, six had late embryonic loss, and one of the mares aborted in the ninth gestational month. Equine alpha-fetoprotein concentrations significantly differed in the normal group (72.93 ± 49.25 pg/mL; mean ± standard deviation) and in the complicated pregnancy loss group (152 ± 36.48 pg/mL; mean ± standard deviation). The mares' age, gestational age, and the conception rate significantly affected the alpha-fetoprotein concentrations in the normal group. Furthermore, notable individual differences occurred in eqAFP concentrations between mares. Equine alpha-fetoprotein seems to be an important indicator of fetal well-being in horses, but there are still some unanswered questions (levels in foals of different age, ponies, and draft horses) regarding this serum protein. Large-scale studies are needed to assess the specificity, sensitivity, and reliability of this test as a possible future diagnostic tool for fetal well-being in horses.
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subjects Aborted Fetus
Abortion, Veterinary - blood
alpha-Fetoproteins - genetics
alpha-Fetoproteins - metabolism
Animals
Equine alpha-fetoprotein
Equine fetus
Female
Fetal well-being
Gene Expression Regulation
Gestation
High-risk pregnancy
Horse Diseases - blood
Horse Diseases - genetics
Horses
Male
Pregnancy
Pregnancy, Animal - blood
Reference Values
title Equine alpha-fetoprotein levels in Lipizzaner mares with normal pregnancies and with pregnancy loss
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