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Reproductive System
Abortion in Large Animals
Overview of Abortion in Large Animals
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Sections in Veterinary Professionals
  • Behavior
  • Circulatory System
  • Clinical Pathology and Procedures
  • Digestive System
  • Emergency Medicine and Critical Care
  • Endocrine System
  • Exotic and Laboratory Animals
  • Eye and Ear
  • Generalized Conditions
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  • Nervous System
  • Pharmacology
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  • Reproductive System
  • Respiratory System
  • Toxicology
  • Urinary System
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Chapters in Reproductive System
  • Reproductive System Introduction
  • Congenital and Inherited Anomalies of the Reproductive System
  • Abortion in Large Animals
  • Bovine Genital Campylobacteriosis
  • Brucellosis in Large Animals
  • Contagious Agalactia
  • Cystic Ovary Disease
  • Equine Coital Exanthema
  • Mastitis in Large Animals
  • Metritis in Large Animals
  • Ovine Posthitis and Vulvitis
  • Postpartum Dysgalactia Syndrome and Mastitis in Sows
  • Prolonged Gestation in Cattle and Sheep
  • Pseudopregnancy in Goats
  • Retained Fetal Membranes in Large Animals
  • Seminal Vesiculitis in Bulls
  • Trichomoniasis
  • Udder Diseases
  • Uterine Prolapse and Eversion
  • Vaginal and Cervical Prolapse
  • Vulvitis and Vaginitis in Large Animals
  • Reproductive Diseases of the Female Small Animal
  • Reproductive Diseases of the Male Small Animal
  • Brucellosis in Dogs
  • Mammary Tumors
  • Prostatic Diseases
  • Canine Transmissible Venereal Tumor
Topics in Abortion in Large Animals
  • Overview of Abortion in Large Animals
  • Abortion in Cattle
  • Abortion in Sheep
  • Abortion in Goats
  • Abortion in Pigs
  • Abortion in Horses
     
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    Overview of Abortion in Large Animals

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    Abortion is the termination of pregnancy after organogenesis is complete but before the expelled fetus can survive. If pregnancy ends before organogenesis, it is called early embryonic death. A dead full-term fetus is a stillbirth (its lungs are not inflated). Many etiologies of abortion also cause stillbirths, mummification, and weak or deformed neonates.

    The etiologic diagnosis of abortion in livestock is a difficult and often frustrating task. The diagnostic success rate is relatively low: 30–40% for bovine, 60–65% for ovine, and 35–40% for porcine abortion cases submitted to diagnostic laboratories. Numerous factors complicate diagnosis. Often, abortion follows initial infection by weeks or months so that the causative agent is no longer apparent by the time abortion occurs. Expulsion may follow fetal death by hours or days, with lesions obscured by autolysis. Fetal membranes and the aborted fetus are usually contaminated by environmental agents before examination. Many sporadic abortions are likely the result of noninfectious (ie, toxic or genetic) causes about which much less is known in comparison to infectious causes; many diagnostic laboratories are not equipped or staffed to deal with these causes of abortion.

    Another problem in determining the cause of abortions is improper or inadequate specimen selection and handling. The best specimen is the complete fetoplacental unit in fresh condition, along with maternal serum. The placenta and fetus should be cleaned with water or saline, packed in clean plastic bags, chilled (but not frozen), and rapidly transported to the diagnostic laboratory. In most cases, autolysis proceeds at a much slower rate in fetuses than in carcasses of animals born alive. If chilled as soon as possible, most fetuses will be suitable for examination, even if they do not reach the laboratory for 1–2 days. Fetal pigs, sheep, and goats are usually small enough to transport or ship the entire fetus and its placenta. If there are multiple fetuses, 3–5 should be submitted with their placentas. It is best to submit calves and foals whole, but in many cases it is more convenient to perform a necropsy and collect samples for submission.

    The specimens that are routinely used for testing vary somewhat between diagnostic laboratories, but a basic set of samples that will allow thorough examination includes stomach or abomasal contents; heart blood or fluid from a body cavity; unfixed lung, liver, kidney, and spleen (some labs also request tissues such as thyroid glands, thymus, heart, brain, abomasum, and stomach); placenta (if available); and dam's serum. These should be submitted in sterile containers to allow for microbiologic cultures. Because they are always contaminated, placentas should not be mixed with other tissues.

    Representative samples of the following should also be submitted in 10% buffered formalin for histopathologic examination: lung, liver, heart, kidney, spleen, brain, skeletal muscle, thyroid, adrenal, intestines, and placenta (see Collection and Submission of Laboratory Samples). In a large majority of cases, gross lesions other than signs of autolysis (increased pleural and peritoneal fluid and blood-tinged subcutaneous edema) are not present. However, if lesions are found, fresh and formalin-fixed samples of affected tissues should be included.

    Most agents, especially bacteria and fungi, infect the placenta and thus gain entry into the aminiotic fluid, which is swallowed by the fetus. Stomach contents can be obtained aseptically, making it the best specimen for detection of fungi and most bacteria. Isolation from the stomach contents is much easier than from the placenta, which is always heavily contaminated. Lungs, liver, spleen, and kidneys are also good for culture. Several agents (eg, fungi, Chlamydophila, Coxiella) primarily affect the placenta; failure to include placenta decreases the probability that they will be identified. Fetuses sometimes produce antibodies to certain agents (eg, bovine viral diarrhea virus, Neospora, Leptospira) and fetal serum or fluid from a body cavity can be tested for antibodies. The presence of precolostral antibodies is evidence of in utero exposure.

    A single antibody titer in the dam rarely provides evidence of abortion caused by a particular agent unless background herd titer levels are known. High maternal titers may as likely be the reason an animal did not abort due to that agent, but absence of a titer can be used to rule out an agent. Antibody titers to agents with control programs (eg, Brucella abortus, pseudorabies virus) are always significant, even if the abortion was caused by something else. Demonstration of a 4-fold increase in antibody titer is required to prove active infection by a specific agent. Often, abortion occurs weeks or months after initial infection of the dam, and her titer is stable or declining at the time of abortion. Paired serum samples obtained 2 wk apart from 10% of the herd or a minimum of 10 animals often demonstrate seroconversion and provide evidence of active infection in the herd.

    Last full review/revision July 2011 by Jerome C. Nietfield, DVM, PhD, DACVP

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