A Crisci
University of Pisa
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Featured researches published by A Crisci.
Theriogenology | 2011
Duccio Panzani; I. Zicchino; A. Taras; P Marmorini; A Crisci; Alessandra Rota; Francesco Camillo
Artificial photoperiod treatment is currently the best method to hasten the first ovulation of the breeding season in winter anoestrus mares. However, this is not easy to apply in large herds of mares and, to be effective, has to be planned in the northern hemisphere in December at the latest. Pharmacological treatments have been proposed as alternatives: GnRH agonists, progesterone or its synthetic agonist Altrenogest, and dopamino-antagonists, as pherphenazine, domperidone or sulpiride. Dopamino-antagonists protocols, beginning at a given day of the year, gave controversial results in terms of hastening ovulation. The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of an up-to-21-d long dopamine antagonist (sulpiride) treatment on mares at the beginning of the spring transition for its ability to hasten estrous cyclicity. In Study 1, 49 seasonally-acyclic standardbred mares, maintained in paddocks under natural photoperiod, were treated with 1 mg/kg/d sulpiride at the evidence of the first follicle with of 25 mm in diameter until ovulation for a maximum of 21 d (Group S(1); n = 34) or left untreated (Group C(1); n = 15). Group S(1) and C(1) mares showed a follicle of 35 mm in diameter after 8 and 22 d (median; P < 0.05) and ovulated after 18 and 43 d, respectively (median; P < 0.05). Twenty-two/26 and 6/15 mares of the Group S(1) and C(1) ovulated within 30 d from the beginning of the treatment, respectively (P < 0.05). All the mares of the study cycled until Autumn, unless they became pregnant. In Study 2, pregnancy rates after the first ovulation of the year of 22 acyclic standardbred mares maintained in paddocks under natural photo-period, treated following the same protocol as Study 1 (S(2)), and 47 untreated mares (C(2)) were compared. In Groups S(2) and C(2,) 63.6% and 61.7% of the mares became pregnant after the first cycle (P > 0.05) and 50.0% and 61.1% of the remaining became pregnant in the following cycles (P > 0.05), respectively. Beginning with sulpiride treatment when follicles were 25 mm in diameter resulted in a significant advancement of cyclicity in non-photo-stimulated mares. Pregnancy rates after artificial insemination of treated mares were similar to those of untreated animals.
Theriogenology | 2012
Duccio Panzani; Alessandra Rota; A Crisci; H. Kindahl; Nadia Govoni; Francesco Camillo
Embryo transfer (ET) in the donkey resulted in a very low recipient pregnancy rates. The aim of these studies was to investigate if nonsurgical transfer techniques or donkey embryo quality affect donkey recipient pregnancy failure. In Study 1, the impact of transfer technique was investigated by evaluating if cervical catheterization is associated with prostaglandin release and suppression of luteal function and if donkey recipients would become pregnant after nonsurgical transfer of horse embryos. Four jennies, from 5 to 8 d after ovulation, were submitted to a sham transcervical ET and to evaluation of PGFM and progesterone plasma concentrations. Five 8 d horse embryos were nonsurgically transferred into synchronized donkey recipients (HD). Cervical stimulation caused a transient PGF(2α) release in two of four jennies in the absence of a significant decrease in progesterone plasma concentration. All transferred horse embryos resulted in pregnancies in the jenny recipients. In Study 2, donkey embryo viability was investigated by 1.2 meters, 6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) staining of 10 embryos and by the transfer of 6 and 12 donkey embryos in synchronized mare (DH) and donkey (DD) recipients, respectively, of known fertility. The estimated proportion of dead cells in DAPI stained embryos was 0.9% (range 0-3.9%) and below what is considered normal (20%) for horse embryos. Three of six and six of 12 of the DH and DD ETs, respectively resulted in pregnancies at 14 and 25 d (50%), a higher pregnancy rate than previously reported after DD ET. The overall results of this study suggest that the transcervical technique for ET and donkey embryo viability are not the reasons for the low pregnancy rates that have previously been described in donkey recipients, and that nonsurgical ET in donkeys can result in acceptable results.
Theriogenology | 2014
A Crisci; Alessandra Rota; Duccio Panzani; Micaela Sgorbini; Jennifer C. Ousey; Francesco Camillo
Although donkey breeding has gained new interest in the past two decades, knowledge about donkey reproduction is still scarce, particularly on jenny pregnancy. The aim of this study was to describe the ultrasonographic and endocrine profiles of the physiological pregnancy in the jenny. The study was performed on 12 pregnancies of 7 Amiata donkeys from Day 10 after ovulation to delivery. Because three pregnancies, respectively at weeks 42, 44, and 45, were considered pathologic and treated pharmacologically, data collected from 2 weeks before diagnosis to the end of pregnancy were removed from the analysis. Average length of the normal pregnancies was 353.4 ± 13.0 days (range, 339-370 days). Timing, dimensions, and development during the first phases of embryonic growth, evaluated using transrectal ultrasound, were similar to that previously described in jennies and mares: first detection of embryonic vesicle was at 11.8 ± 1.3 days of gestation and diameter was 6.5 ± 1.9 mm, loss of spherical shape occurred at 18.5 ± 1.4 days, and embryo and heart beat were first seen at 22.0 ± 1.1 and 25 ± 1.1 days, respectively. The intrauterine growth in the second half of pregnancy, evaluated using the transrectal and transabdominal approach, also showed strong positive correlations, similar to that reported for the mare. The trends of the combined thickness of the utero-placental unit and the echogenicity of the amniotic and allantoic fluids are examples. The diameters (mm) of fetal chest, eye orbit, and aorta increased throughout pregnancy and were 40.6 ± 2.9, 8.7 ± 1.5, and 3.5 ± 0.7, respectively, at week 13, and 190.9 ± 12.0, 21.4 ± 1.5, and 30.6 ± 1.8 at the last evaluation before parturition. In contrast, heart rate decreased as pregnancy progressed. Regression analyses between these parameters and day of gestation were statistically significant (P < 0.001). All fetuses consistently showed some intrauterine activity. Maternal plasma progestagens and estrone sulfate concentrations followed a pattern similar to that seen in mares, although the prepartal progestagen peak was lower in jennies. This study provides a range of ultrasonographic and endocrine values for normal pregnancy in jennies.
Veterinary Research Communications | 2009
Duccio Panzani; A Crisci; Alessandra Rota; Francesco Camillo
Effect of day of transfer and treatment administration on the recipient on pregnancy rates after equine embryo transfer D. Panzani & A. Crisci & A. Rota & F. Camillo Published online: 11 July 2009 # Springer Science + Business Media B.V. 2009
Theriogenology | 2010
Francesco Camillo; Duccio Panzani; C. Scollo; Alessandra Rota; A Crisci; Iacopo Vannozzi; S. Balbo
Theriogenology | 2015
Jordi Miró; K. Vilés; O. Anglada; H. Marín; J. Jordana; A Crisci
Reproduction in Domestic Animals | 2008
A Crisci; Alessandra Rota; Duccio Panzani; Micaela Sgorbini; Francesco Camillo
LXI Convegno Società Italiana delle Scienze Veterinarie (SISVet) | 2007
A Crisci; Duccio Panzani; R Viggiani; Alessandra Rota; Francesco Camillo
LX CONVEGNO SISVET | 2006
Duccio Panzani; A Bouakkaz; A Crisci; Iacopo Vannozzi; Alessandra Rota; Francesco Camillo
SIRA | 2010
A Crisci; Alessandra Rota; Duccio Panzani; Francesco Camillo; R Cash; J. C. Ousei