Katsumi Hamana
Kagoshima University
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Featured researches published by Katsumi Hamana.
Theriogenology | 1997
Shunichi Kamimura; N. Nishiyama; Shoji Ookutsu; Kazufumi Goto; Katsumi Hamana
Fetal sex can be determined by the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) using cells from fetal fluid collected by transvaginal ultrasound-guided amniocentesis. A total of 35 aspirates from 30 cows, 15 Holsteins and 15 Japanese Blacks at 59 to 250 d of pregnancy were used. Five cows were aspirated twice at a 10-d interval. A 5.0 MHz convex array transducer connected to a scanner was inserted into the vagina under caudal epidural anesthesia. The transducer was equipped with a 65-cm long, 21-g needle within the probe carrier. A bovine male-specific primer and a bovine gender-neutral primer were used. Fetal fluid was obtained from all except 2 cows in early pregnancy. Five animals aborted within 1 wk following aspiration. A total of 33 samples, 29 of amniotic fluid and 4 of allantoic fluid, was subjected to PCR analysis. Fetal gender was verified in 31 33 samples (18 females and 13 males). Gender was also determined by gross examination of external genitalia of offspring after calving or abortion. Fetal gender was correctly identified by PCR analysis of aspirated fetal fluid in 16 16 females and in 13 15 males. Transvaginal ultrasound-guided amniocentesis followed by PCR analysis of aspirated cell DNA can be used accurately to determine fetal sex in cows at 70 to 100 d of gestation. The procedure requires considerable skill and is not without some risk to fetal viability.
Journal of Veterinary Science | 2008
Lu Meng Chao; Koji Takayama; Yoshitaka Nakanishi; Katsumi Hamana; Mitsuhiro Takagi; Chikara Kubota; Toshiyuki Kojima
The present experiment aims to examine the efficiency of estrus synchronization using progesterone and equine chorionic gonadotrophin (eCG) and to look at luteal function. During the non-breeding and breeding season, 5 adult female Korean native goats were injected intramuscularly with 2.5 ml of physiological saline as the control. A progesterone impregnated intravaginal sponge was then kept in the same goats for 10 days followed, after a week, by an intramuscular injection of 500 IU eCG. Five adult female Nubian goats were mated with a fertile buck during the non-breeding season. During the non-breeding season 2 of the 5 goats showed a normal estrous cycle (ranging from 18 to 21 days) and 3 a short estrous cycle (ranging from 3 to 6 days). During the breeding season the equivalent figures were 1 and 2. The major axes of the corpus luteum (CL) were measured by means of calipers built into the ultrasonography system, and the concentrations of plasma progesterone (P4) were determined by double antibody radioimmunoassay. The mean major axes of the CL in goats showing the short cycle (6.1 ± 0.5 mm) was significantly smaller than in those showing the normal cycle (8.9 ± 0.5 mm; p < 0.01) and also the value of P4 in goats showing the short cycle (4.2 ± 2.1 ng/ml) was significantly lower than for those showing the normal cycle (10.3 ± 4.3 ng/ml; p < 0.05) at day 3 following ovulation. Three out of 5 Nubian goats became pregnant but only one goat carried to full term. The present experiment indicated that a combination of progesterone and eCG was effective in inducing estrus, although it resulted in a high incidence of short luteal lifespan. The low kidding rate and high incidence of embryonic loss may be due to the instability of the luteal lifespan.
Journal of Veterinary Science | 2008
A. Gaja; Katsumi Hamana; Chikara Kubota; Toshiyuki Kojima
This study was designed to evaluate the reproductive performance of Japanese black cows following the 3rd injection of gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) analogue administered concurrently with Ovsynch-based treatment on day 6 (day 1 = the day of ovulation). In Experiment 1, 12 cows were allocated into three groups: a control group that was subjected to Ovsynch treatment and then injected with a placebo on day 6; group 1 (Ovsynch + GnRH), which was subjected to Ovsynch treatment and was injected with GnRH analogue on day 6, and group 2 (Ovsynch + controlled internal drug-release (CIDR) + GnRH), which received Ovsynch-CIDR treatment and was injected with GnRH analogue on day 6. Blood collection and ultrasonographic observation of the ovaries were conducted daily. Both treatments induced the formation of an accessory corpus luteum and significantly increased the cross-sectional area of the luteal tissue when compared to the control. However, plasma progesterone (P4) was significantly higher in the treatment groups than in the control group on days 11, 12, 17 and 18 in the group 1 and from day 10 to 21 in the group 2. In Experiment 2, 41 cows were assigned to the same three groups described above and then artificially inseminated on day 1. The pregnancy rates on day 45 did not differ among groups. In conclusion, administration of GnRH analogue on day 6 following Ovsynch-based treatment did not improve the reproductive performance of Japanese black cows, even though the P4 concentration was higher in groups that received the GnRH.
Theriogenology | 1993
Shunichi Kamimura; Shouji Enomoto; Kazufumi Goto; Katsumi Hamana
A Globosus amorphus along with a living calf was encountered following the transfer of blastocysts obtained by in vitro fertilization of in vitro-matured follicular oocytes in Japanese black cattle. Two embryos obtained 9 days after in vitro fertilization developed into either a hatched blastocyst with distinct inner cell mass or an expanded blastocyst with indistinct inner cell mass. The embryos were loaded into a 0.25-ml plastic straw and were nonsurgically transferred to the uterus of a heifer on Day 8 (Day 0 = estrus). On Day 75, a twin pregnancy was ultrasonically diagnosed in the right uterine horn, in which a live fetus with distinct limbs and a concomitant ovoid mass were detected. On Day 287, the dam developed parturient paralysis with dropsy of the fetal membranes. By palpation per rectum an ovoid mass was detected in the body of the uterus [corpus uteri] and a larger live fetus was in the uterine horn. A cesarean section was performed to extract a live fetus and a Globosus amorphus. The live fetus was female with the 60, XX female complements.
Journal of the American College of Toxicology | 1996
Hidenobu Sameshima; Katsumi Hamana
The response of the testis to exogenous gonadotropins was examined by determining serum testosterone (T) levels and by observing histopathological changes of the testes using 5–7 month-old males. After a single combined injection of 100 IU plus 15 IU human menopausal gonadotropin (hMG) or 500 IU human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) plus 15 IU hMG, the serum T levels reached peak values 72 h after administration. During repeated aministration of the combined injection of 100 IU hCG plus 15 IU hMG at five 3-day intervals (Day 0, 3, 6, 9, 12), the serum T levels reached peak values 3 days after the first injection, which were about 3 times higher than the mean serum T levels of adult monkeys. The serum T levels decreased gradually on subsequent days of treatment. Three days after the fifth injection (Day 15), the T levels were equal to the T levels of adult monkeys. The testicular volumes on Day 15 were significantly higher than those on the first day of injection. The histopathological examination of the testes (210, 238 mg) obtained from two treated males revealed hyperplasia and hypertrophy of the Leydig cells and spermatogonias, spermatocytes, and mitotic germinal cells were observed in the seminiferous tubule. Only spermatogonia were found in the one testis (150 mg) obtained from an untreated male. From the above results, it was confirmed that the testes of infant cynomolgus monkeys produced T levels in the same way as the testes of adult monkeys in response to the administration of exogenous gonadotropins. Additionally, the initiation of the spermatogenetic process in the testes of infant monkeys was stimulated by exogenous gonadotropins, therefore suggesting that this method could become a useful means to evaluate the testicular function of infant males.
Veterinary Research | 2004
Tomoyuki Tsuda; Kazuo Yoshida; Seiichi Ohashi; Tohru Yanase; Masuo Sueyoshi; Syunichi Kamimura; Kazuhiro Misumi; Katsumi Hamana; Hiroshi Sakamoto; Makoto Yamakawa
Journal of Veterinary Medical Science | 1993
Iwao Sakojju; Shouji Enomoto; Shunichi Kamimura; Katsumi Hamana
Journal of Veterinary Medical Science | 1996
Hiroshi Nagatomo; Takamasa Shimizu; Yuhsuke Higashiyama; Yasumasa Yano; Hiromitsu Kuroki; Katsumi Hamana
Journal of Veterinary Medical Science | 2004
Amrozi; Shunichi Kamimura; Takaaki Ando; Katsumi Hamana
Journal of Veterinary Medical Science | 2005
Takaaki Ando; Shunichi Kamimura; Katsumi Hamana; Gen Watanabe; Kazuyoshi Taya