Progesterone levels and relationship with the diagnosis of a corpus luteum by rectal palpation during the estrous cycle in Zebu cows

Theriogenology. 1983 Jul;20(1):67-76. doi: 10.1016/0093-691x(83)90025-0.

Abstract

To assess the accuracy of rectal palpation for detecting functional luteal tissue during the estrous cycle in Zebu cattle, 20 mature non-lactating Indobrazil cows were palpated twice weekly for 7 1/2 weeks. Blood samples were drawn for progesterone analyses at each palpation. Circulating serum progesterone levels were below 0.5 ng/ml from days 0-4 (Day 0 = day of estrus); they increased thereafter, reaching maximum levels of 3.1 ng/ml on days 9 and 10. Values declined sharply to less than 0.5 ng/ml on day 18. Regardless of the stage of the estrous cycle in 71.3% of the cases (117 out of a total of 164 observations) the circulating progesterone levels corresponded to the results of rectal examination. The criteria to assess this relationship were that the presence of CL as determined by rectal palpation would be accompanied by levels of progesterone higher than 0.5 ng/ml, whereas absence of CL would be accompanied by levels less than 0.5 ng/ml. The correlation was significantly higher (P<0.05) on days 5-17 (77.9%) than on days 0-4 (57.5%) and 18-20 (65%). To assess the correlation of both rectal examination and progesterone levels with the stage of the estrous cycle, we expected that on days 0-4 and 18-20 no palpable CL and progesterone levels less than 0.5 ng/ml would occur, whereas on days 5-17 palpable CL and progesterone levels higher than 0.5 ng/ml would be found. On this basis, a correlation of 45% (18 out of 40 observations) between expected and observed values was found on days 0-4, 76% (79 out of 104) on days 5-17 and 60% (12 out of 20) on days 18-20 of the estrous cycle. Of the total of 55 observations which fell outside the expected values, 71% was due to a wrong diagnosis of CL; 14.5% was due to progesterone levels higher or lower than the expected values, and 14.5% to both laboratory and rectal palpation findings.