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Journal of Reproduction and Fertility (1978) 52 249-254
DOI: 10.1530/jrf.0.0520249
Copyright © 1978 Society for Reproduction and Fertility
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Effect of fetal hypophysectomy on the initiation of parturition in the goat

N. C. Rawlings and W. R. Ward

Summary. Fetal hypophysectomy performed between 97 and 130 days of gestation caused a significant (P < 0·005) prolongation of pregnancy in 5 goats in which every fetus was treated. Three of these goats gave birth spontaneously. Sham surgery or hypophysectomy of one fetus of twins had no effect on gestation length. Hypophysectomized kids, delivered after prolonged pregnancy, were significantly heavier than normal term kids (P < 0·005) and had lighter adrenals (P < 0·025). Measurements of maternal peripheral plasma concentrations of progesterone and total unconjugated oestrogens showed that the changes in goats carrying hypophysectomized fetuses were similar to those of normal pregnancy except that the prepartum oestrogen peak was absent, whether or not parturition occurred spontaneously.







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Copyright © 1978 by the Society for Reproduction and Fertility.