Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Medical treatment for a dog carrying a mummified fetus too long
By Spruijt, Annemarie et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2022·Department of Clinical Sciences, Netherlands·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Case Report: Medical Management of Prolonged Gestation of a Mummified Fetus in a Bitch.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 3-year-old female rough coated collie was brought in because she was 69 days pregnant but showed no signs of going into labor. The vet found a small, firm structure in her abdomen and an ultrasound revealed a collapsed fetus with some fluid around it. To help her deliver, the vet used a medication to relax her cervix and stimulate contractions. Three days later, she successfully expelled the mummified fetus and went on to have two more healthy litters without any issues. This treatment was effective and did not harm her future ability to breed.
People also search for: dog pregnancy complications · rough coated collie no signs of labor · mummified fetus in dogs treatment
Abstract
A 3-year-old female rough coated collie was presented at day 69 (D69) after the first mating. She was mated on 2 consecutive days based on ovulation timing by the referring veterinarian. At day 30 post breeding, a single, live embryo was seen on ultrasound by this veterinarian. On D69, the bitch was presented to us because she lacked signs of impending parturition such as vulvar discharge or nest building behavior. On general examination, the bitch appeared clinically healthy and no prodromi were present. On abdominal palpation a small, firm structure and a slightly enlarged uterus were detected. There was no vulvar discharge. Using vaginoscopy we could not see any signs of cervical dilatation. Additionally, ultrasonography revealed the presence of a collapsed fetus in the uterus with a moderate amount of echogenic fluid surrounding it and the plasma progesterone concentration was 2.6 ng/ml. A parturition induction protocol was initiated: a progesterone receptor antagonist was administered, followed by PGF2α to induce cervical relaxation and uterine contractions. The fetus was expelled 3 days later, without noticeable damage to the reproductive tract of the dam. The bitch subsequently delivered two more litters without complications. To our knowledge this is the first clinical report that demonstrates a successfultreatment to expel a mummified fetus aftergestation. The pharmacological treatment did not affect the future fertility of the breeding dog, which is an important outcome for breeders.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35720855/