Normal Parturition - Anatomy & Physiology
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Stages of Parturition
The following table summarises the normal time taken to progress through the stages of parturition in different species.
Species | Mare | Cow | Ewe | Sow | Bitch |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Stage 1: Contractions and Cervical Dilation | 1-4 hours | 2-6 hours | 2-6 hours | 2-12 hours | 6-12 hours |
Stage 2: Foetal Expulsion | 12-30 minutes | 30 minutes - 4 hours | 30-120 minutes | 150-180 minutes | 6 hours (up to 24 hours with large litters) |
Stage 3: Placental Expulsion | 1 hour | 6-12 hours | 5-8 hours | 1-4 hours | Placenta Exits with Foetus |
The step in the reproductive process that immediately precedes lactation, uterine involution and return to cyclicity. It is initiated by the foetus and involves a complex cascade of endocrine events. Parturition is the process by which the conceptus (foetus, placenta and placental membranes) is expelled from the uterus; this requires cervical softening,coordinated myometrial contractions and contraction of abdominal muscles to occur
Placental Changes
During the last 5 days of gestation, there are changes in the placenta.
- Collaginisation of the placentome.
- Flattening of maternal crypt epithelium.
- Leucocyte migration and increased activity.
- Reduction of binucleate cells in the trophectoderm.
- Weakening of the acellular protein layer between cotyledonary and caruncular epithelium.
Contractions
- Open endometrial crypts
- Foetal villi have shrunk due to the escape of blood from the foetal side of the placenta when the umbillical cord ruptures.
- Myometrial contractions aid exsanguination of the placenta.
- Separation of foetal membranes.
- Apex of the allantochorionic sac becomes inverted.
- As the sac is 'rolled' down the uterine horns, foetal villi are drawn out of the crypts.
- When a large portion becomes detached and inverted, it forms a mass in the maternal pelvis.
- Stimulates reflex contractions of abdominal muscles.
- Completes expulsion of the allantochorionic sac.
- In polytocious species, dehisence and expulsion of foetal membranes are interspersed with births of the young.
- Only expulsion of the last afterbirth stimulates abdominal contractions.
- The final stage of allantochorionic expulsion lasts 1 hour (mare) - 6 hours (cow).
- Domestic animals normally eat the afterbirth.
- Not the mare or camelids.
Placental Expulsion
In most species, expulsion of foetal membranes quickly follows expulsion of the foetus.
- After the birth of the young, regular abdominal contractions largely cease.
- Myometrial contractions persist.
- Decreased amplitude, but become more frequent and less regular.
- Important for dehiscence and expulsion of foetal membranes.
- Waves of contractions from uterus to the cervix persist.
- Act in a peristaltic fashion in the cow and sow in the reverse direction.
Parturition Behaviour
Mare
Cow
Ewe
Sow
= Bitch
Cat
During the last week of pregnancy, the queen seeks a nesting area. This is usually a quiet, undisturbed spot but some house cats will demand more human contact.Mammary development becomes noticable in the last week of pregnancy, especially in maiden cats. Rectal temperature may fall a few days before parturition, but this is not a reliable indicator.
Stage 1
- Restless
- Frequently visits the site for kittening
- Occasionally lies down and will strain unproductively.
Stage 2
- Straining in lateral recumbency.
- Rapid expulsion of kittens with a short interval between each birth.
- Parturition usually complete within a few hours.
- If the queen is alarmed, this may disrupt the pattern and she may move the kittens to a new area before parturition resumes.
- Soon after birth the kittens begin to suckle.
Stage 3
- Placentae usually expelled still attached to the foetus or shortly afterwards.
- Consumed by the queen.
- Breakdown of marginal haematoma releases biliverdin, giving the discharge a brownish colour.