P Marmorini
University of Pisa
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Featured researches published by P Marmorini.
Journal of Equine Veterinary Science | 1997
Francesco Camillo; P Marmorini; S Romagnoli; Iacopo Vannozzi; Marco Bagliacca
Summary A retrospective study on the reproductive performance of 401 artificially inseminated trotter mares during six breeding seasons is presented. Mares, 279 post partum (PP) and 122 maiden and barren, or nonlactating (NL), were inseminated with fresh semen obtained from four fertile stallions of the same breed. Pregnancy rate (PR) of mares inseminated at the foal heat (182/253, 71.9%) was lower, but not significantly different, than the PR (22/26, 84.6%) of mares inseminated for the first time at the second post partum cycle and similar to the PR at the first and second cycle of NL mares (95/112, 77.8% and 25/33, 75.7%, respectively). PR of mares inseminated at the foal heat was higher, but nonsignificantly different, from PR of the post partum mares not pregnant after artificial insemination (AI) at foal heat and inseminated again at the following estrous cycle. The PR after AI at the foal heat was significantly higher than the PR when the AI was performed at the third or later cycle in NL mares (71.9% vs 22.2%, P
Equine Veterinary Journal | 2000
Francesco Camillo; P Marmorini; S Romagnoli; M Cela; G Duchamp; E. Palmer
The aim of this study was to test whether low dose oxytocin i.v. injection once a day to mares diagnosed as being ready for birth by mammary secretion calcium strip test measurements could be used as a reliable method to induce parturition and/or predict the mare would not foal during the following night if parturition did not occur within 2 h of treatment. Fifty-one near-term Haflinger mares were used and a single injection of 2.5 iu oxytocin was given between 1700 and 1900 h, including 10 mares used as controls which were administered a placebo. Administration of oxytocin resulted in the delivery of a normal foal within 120 min in 95% of mares. Twenty-four out of 38 (63%) treated animals foaled in response to the first oxytocin injection, 9 out of 38 (24%) in response to the second injection and 3 out of 38 (8%) in response to the third treatment. Two out of 38 (5%) treated mares foaled during the night irrespective of treatment whereas 7 out of 10 (70%) control mares foaled during the night. It was concluded that the major advantage of injecting a daily low dose of oxytocin appears to be that such a low dose induces delivery only in mares carrying a mature fetus and which are ready to foal.
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 | 2014
Duccio Panzani; Alessandra Rota; P Marmorini; Iacopo Vannozzi; Francesco Camillo
In this study, 198 donor mares of different breeds, ages, and reproductive category were inseminated with fresh, cooled and frozen or frozen and cooled semen at the embryo transfer station or in private artificial insemination centers during 10 breeding seasons. The results of this activity were retrospectively analyzed by Pearson Chi-square test and logistic regression to evaluate factors affecting multiple ovulations, embryo recovery, embryo quality, and embryo diameter. Out of the 661 cycles, 937 ovulations were recorded (mean ovulations/cycle: 1.42 ± 0.58). Ovulation rate and incidence of multiple ovulations were significantly affected by age, breed, and reproductive category. Uterine flushings for embryo recovery were performed between 7 and 10 days after ovulation and resulted in the recovery of 338 embryos (51.1% embryos/cycle and 36.1% embryos/ovulation, respectively). At least one embryo was recovered in 298 flushings (45.1%). The factors affecting embryo recovery were age, breed, reproductive category, type of semen, number of ovulations, and location of artificial insemination. Flushing protocol and day of flushing had no effect on embryo recovery. Age, type of semen, number of ovulations, and day of flushing had a significant influence on embryo diameter (N = 215). None of the factors included in the model had an effect on embryo quality distribution.
Veterinary Research Communications | 2006
Alessandra Rota; A Crisci; L Maranghi; C Tozzi; C Tarantino; P Marmorini; Micaela Sgorbini; Iacopo Vannozzi; Francesco Camillo
A. Rota1,∗, A. Crisci2, L. Maranghi3, C. Tozzi3, C. Tarantino4, P. Marmorini5, M. Sgorbini1, I. Vannozzi1 and F. Camillo1 1Department of Veterinary Clinic, University of Pisa, Italy; 2Department of Gynaecology, Perinatology and Child-care, University “La Sapienza”, Rome, Italy; 3Department of Animal Pathology, Prophylaxis and Food Hygiene, University of Pisa, Italy; 4Practitioner, Crespina (PI), Italy ∗Correspondence: E-mail: [email protected]
Journal of Equine Veterinary Science | 2016
Duccio Panzani; Iacopo Vannozzi; P Marmorini; Alessandra Rota; Francesco Camillo
Journal of Equine Veterinary Science | 2011
Micaela Sgorbini; P Marmorini; Alessandra Rota; Angela Briganti; Michele Corazza
Theriogenology | 2015
Micaela Sgorbini; Francesca Bonelli; Alessandra Rota; P Marmorini; Giulia Biagi; Michele Corazza; Anna Pasquini
Theriogenology | 2015
Micaela Sgorbini; Francesca Bonelli; Alessandra Rota; P Marmorini; Giulia Biagi; Michele Corazza; Anna Pasquini
Ippologia | 2005
Micaela Sgorbini; Simona Nardoni; S Cecchi; Fabio Macchioni; Michele Corazza; Alessandra Rota; P Marmorini