4.4 Article

Canine amniotic fluid at birth: From a discarded sample to a potential diagnostic of neonatal maturity

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ANIMAL REPRODUCTION SCIENCE
卷 248, 期 -, 页码 -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.anireprosci.2022.107184

关键词

Amniotic fluid; Foetal maturity; Dog; Amniotic Surfactant Protein A; Pentraxin 3; Lecithin; Sphingomyelin

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In canine clinical practice, it is crucial to find new reliable markers for evaluating neonatal maturity. Concerns about the safety of amniotic sampling in pregnant dogs have hindered its collection for diagnostic purposes. However, recent studies have shown that amniocentesis is a reliable and safe procedure in dogs. This study analyzed amniotic fluid samples collected from ten dogs undergoing elective Caesarean sections at term to identify potential indices of canine neonatal maturity.
The definition of new reliable markers for neonatal maturity evaluation is crucial in canine clinical practice. Concerns about the safety of amniotic sampling in pregnant dogs have prevented its collection for diagnostic purposes. Moreover, amniotic fluid had been considered waste ma-terial until the latest studies reported amniocentesis as a reliable and safe procedure, even in the canine species. In our study, amniotic fluid (n = 63) collected at birth from ten dogs undergoing elective Caesarean sections at term was analysed to discover new potential indices of canine neonatal maturity. Based on gestational age, mothers and puppies were divided into two groups: the early group (<= 65 days from luteinizing hormone (LH) surge, n = 5) and the late group (>65 days from LH surge, n = 5). Amniotic parameters of the lightest and heaviest puppy in individual/ each litter, with a birth weight difference of at least 20% among littermates, were also compared. In particular, the content of lecithin, sphingomyelin, surfactant protein A (SP-A), cortisol, and pentraxin 3 (PTX3) in amniotic fluid, which is considered predictive of foetal development in humans, were investigated. Maternal serum SP-A and cortisol were also measured simultaneously.All amniotic parameters were detectable in canine amniotic fluid. Interestingly, the concen-trations of different amniotic parameters correlated with each other. Lecithin was positively correlated with sphingomyelin (p < 0.0001), maternal SP-A (p < 0.0005), and the ratio of am-niotic and maternal cortisol (p < 0.004). Amniotic SP-A was inversely correlated to maternal SP-A (p < 0.05), lecithin (p < 0.005), and lecithin-sphingomyelin ratio (p < 0.05). A positive corre-lation was also recorded between amniotic and maternal cortisol (p < 0.008). Considering that all puppies were born alive and mature, these data could provide a potential range of expected amniotic values in full-term new-born dogs. Furthermore, since gestational age was positively correlated with both maternal and amniotic cortisol (p < 0.0001) and amniotic PTX3 (p < 0.05), amniotic fluid seems to be an attractive, innovative, and minimally invasive matrix with potential diagnostic and prognostic utility for the investigation of canine maturity.

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