|
Equine Pregnancy Terminology
There are different terms to describe the developing foal in
utero. Furthermore, certain terms are used to describe the foal when
it is delivered in an abnormal condition or at the wrong time of
gestation. These terms can be confusing and are often improperly
applied. It is important to use the correct terms because their use
allows for better communication and helps categorize the process
causing the problem, allowing certain conditions to be considered as
possible etiologies and others discarded.
Following fertilization of the ovum, the early developing foal is
referred to as a conceptus (the tissues destined to become
the embryo and placental membranes) or an embryo. The term
embryo can refer to the entire conceptus, or to the portion that
forms the foal. The end of the embryo stage is somewhat arbitrary.
Some authors use the end of organogenesis to signal the transition
from the embryo to the fetus. Others prefer to classify based
on when external taxonomic features become identifiable (the single
digit in horses). Even using these criteria, the time point is not
clear-cut. Completion of organogenesis has been proposed to be by
day 23 of gestation by some and day 30 by others. External feature
development allowing classification is anywhere from day 38 to 60.
In general, a conceptus prior to day 40 is referred to as an embryo,
and after day 40 as a fetus. The offspring remains a fetus until
delivery, becoming a foal upon birth at the end of gestation.
An equine fetus near the completion of gestation is sometimes
referred to as a term fetus.
Premature interruption of gestation with loss of the offspring is a
relatively common occurrence. In women it is referred to as
miscarriage or preterm birth, and in animals it is called
abortion. Abortion in horses is subdivided by time of
occurrence. At the beginning of gestation it is referred to as
early embryonic loss, and during the fetal stage it is called an
abortion. Most pregnancy losses in mares occur as early embryonic
losses. Abortions are also called stillbirths. Technically,
delivery of a dead offspring at any time of gestation is a
stillbirth; however, the term is usually reserved for delivery of a
non-viable offspring after the time when viability outside the
reproductive tract is possible. In humans this is usually after 24
weeks of gestation (prior to 20 weeks is termed a miscarriage).
Using these criteria, loss in a mare after about 310 to 320 days
would be a stillbirth. Although there is obvious overlap, it is
useful to think of loss of a term fetus as a stillbirth, reserving
abortion for earlier losses. This allows a different set of causes
to be considered in a stillbirth, many related to the delivery or
birthing process. By contrast, abortions are often caused by
conditions affecting the membranes, such as placentitis or torsion
of the umbilical cord.
In contrast to other species, mares have a highly variable gestation
length. The average length of gestation is between 320 and 370 days.
Therefore, the concept of a mare being overdue when gestation goes
beyond the “average” 340-day interval is erroneous. Mares have to be
considered on an individual basis. A mare will typically have her
own normal gestation length. Therefore, a mare that normally
delivers at 360 days may have a premature foal at 335 days, while a
mare that normally delivers at 330 days may have a normal-term foal
at 325 days. In general, births before 320 days are considered
premature, and foals rarely survive if born before 300 days.
While premature describes foals born early, there are several terms
used to describe live, but abnormal, foals born beyond their
expected delivery date. Some of these foals are small and appear
premature. These are dysmature foals. Dysmaturity is commonly
associated with placental insufficiency. Foals with extended
gestation that are normal to large in skeletal size but thin are
called postmature. The classical cause of postmaturity is
consumption of endophyte-infected fescue grass by the mare. Each of
these conditions has distinct clinical characteristics and requires
special medical treatment.
CONTACT:
Dr. Neil Williams, (859) 253-0571, nmwillia@uky.edu
Livestock Disease Diagnostic Center, university of Kentucky,
Lexington, Kentucky
Article appeared in the Equine Disease Quarterly -
University of Kentucky, College of Agriculture, Department of
Veterinary Science: January 2006 Issue; Volume 13, Number 1
BACK TO ARTICLES |