Fertility and Reproduction
Timed artificial insemination conception rates in response to a progesterone insert in lactating dai
Our objective was to determine the effectiveness of exogenous progesterone in the form of an intravaginal insert (controlled internal drug release, CIDR) in conjunction with an ovulation-synchronization protocol in lactating dairy cows. Cows received a Presynch protocol (two injections of prostaglandin F2α [PGF2α] 14 days apart) beginning 30 and 36 days in milk, respectively, in two herds.
Cows were inseminated after the second Presynch injection when estrus was detected. Remaining cows were treated with the Ovsynch protocol, and alternate cows were assigned randomly to receive a progesterone insert (CIDR). Blood was collected, and body condition scores (BCS) were assigned to treated cows. Pregnancy status was confirmed by palpation on day 38 post timed AI (TAI) and verified again 4 weeks later.
Progesterone increased   conception rates in treated cows when  compared with controls (38 vs.   24%), but did not differ from early  inseminated cows (38%). Pregnancy   loss was numerically less in  progesterone-treated cows than in controls   (4.4 vs. 11.8%).
Introduction
Fate   of a dairy cow lies in her ability to reproduce; however, in an    constantly changing dairy industry, reproductive performance has    dramatically declined. As a means to manage reproductive programs,    ovulation-synchronization protocols were developed. Development of the    Ovsynch protocol opened new doors for the dairy producer. Variations of    the Ovsynch protocol have been tested to synchronize ovulation by    altering timing of gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) and PGF2α    injections. 
Because GnRH is used to control follicular development and   induce  ovulation of a dominant follicle and PGF2α causes regression of   the  corpus luteum (CL), timing of injections can further improve   fertility  when used at certain stages of the estrous cycle. Follicular    development and early maintenance of pregnancy requires endogenous    progesterone to be secreted by the CL. Progesterone prevents the return    of estrus and is used to synchronize estrus. Integration of exogenous    progesterone into a synchronization protocol can prevent estrus in  cows   before insert removal and TAI.
Other studies have found   progesterone treatment of cows before first  service to improve TAI   conception rates, regardless of whether they  had normal estrous cycles   before AI. In a previous study, cows were  inseminated during 28 days   while the Presynch protocol was applied to  them (two injections of PGF2α   administered 14 days apart). Those not  yet inseminated were then   treated with a progesterone insert as part  of the Ovysnch protocol.   Resulting TAI conception rates were improved  compared with   non-progesterone treated cows. Our objective was to  apply progesterone   to cows (as part of the Ovsynch protocol) that had  not been inseminated   during 12 days after the second of two Presynch  injections and determine   subsequent TAI conception rates.
Procedures
Lactating   dairy cows on 2 dairy farms were enrolled in a Presynch +  Ovsynch   protocol after parturition and assigned randomly (based on  lactation   number: 1, 2, or 3+) to receive either of two treatments:  CIDR or no   CIDR if they failed to express estrus and were not  inseminated after the   second of two Presynch injections (Figure 1).  Cows received 2 initial   Presynch injections of PGF2α. Cows detected in  estrus after the second   Presynch injection of PGF2α were inseminated.  
Figure 1. Experimental Design of Treatments. 

PGF2α = prostaglandin F2α; 
CIDR = progesterone releasing intravaginal   insert; 
GnRH = gonadotropin releasing hormone; 
AI = artificial   insemination; and 
TAI = timed AI.
Results and Discussion
Serum progesterone concentrations revealed that the majority of cows were cycling before TAI. At location 1, 39.6% of the cows were inseminated early between the second Presynch PGF2α injection and the onset of the Ovsynch protocol, whereas 26.5% were inseminated early at location 2. Of the remaining 333 cows, 231 (69.4%) were found to have elevated progesterone in either or both samples collected before treatment, indicating that about 30% of the treated cows were not cycling or anovulatory before treatment.
Overall conception rates did not differ between herds (32 vs. 34%) or between cows that were cycling and not cycling (34 vs. 28%; Table 1) before treatment. Younger cows had greater (P < 0.05) conception rates than older cows (Table 1). Cows with more body condition had greater conception rates. Cows having a BCS < 1.75 averaged 12.5 percentage points less in conception rate than those cows having BCS ≥ 2.25 (Table 1).
Table 1. Location, Cycling Status, Lactation Number, and Body Condition Effects on AI Conception Rates
   
a Different (P < 0.05) from 2+ lactation cows.
1 Based on serum concentrations of progesterone in  blood samples   collected before the second Presynch PGF2α injection and  before the   onset of the Ovsynch protocol in progesterone insert and  control cows   only.
2 Assessed before the second Presynch PGF2α injection.
Timed AI conception rates   were greater in cows treated with the  progesterone insert compared with   controls (38 vs. 25%), regardless of  cycling status (Table 2). Early   inseminated cows had conception rates  similar to CIDR-treated cows.   Pregnancy loss in CIDRtreated cows was  similar to early bred cows, but   less than controls. Concentrations of  progesterone 11 days after timed   AI tended to be greater than those in  controls. Our study shows that   increased conception rates can be  achieved by using a progesterone   insert in a reduced population of  cows not yet inseminated. Further,   thinner cows had poorer TAI  conception rates, and cows in their first   lactation were more fertile  than older cows. This study is part of a   larger, multi-state study in  which a similar protocol was applied to   cows in Arizona, California,  and Wisconsin. Results of the entire study   are forthcoming.
Table 2. Conception Rates, Pregnancy Loss, and Serum Progesterone After AI in Lactating Dairy Cows in Response to Treatment

a,b Mean percentages having different superscript letters differ (P < 0.01).
x,y Mean percentages having different superscript letters tended (P < 0.10) to differ.
1 Cows in the Early AI treatment were inseminated  after detected estrus   following the second Presynch PGF2α injection.  The Ovsynch protocol was   applied to the remaining cows not  inseminated, of which approximately   one-half were treated either with a  progesterone insert (CIDR) for 7   days beginning with the first GnRH  injection or served as controls.
2 At location 1, 37.1% of the cows were inseminated  early between the   second Presynch PGF2α injection and the onset of the  Ovsynch protocol,   whereas 24.5% were inseminated early at location 2.
by C. A. Martel, B. S. Buttrey, M. G. Burns, W. E. Brown, and J. S.  Stevenson - Kansas State University Agricultural Experiment Station






















