Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
How short-term hypothyroidism affects dog pregnancy and puppies
By Panciera, D L et al.·Published in Theriogenology·2007·Department of Small Animal Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Effect of short-term hypothyroidism on reproduction in the bitch.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of healthy female dogs (bitches) with induced hypothyroidism (an underactive thyroid) were studied to see how it affected their ability to have puppies. All the dogs became pregnant and had litters, but those with hypothyroidism had longer labor and their puppies were less likely to survive at birth compared to healthy dogs. The puppies from the hypothyroid dogs also weighed less at birth, although they gained weight normally in the following weeks. While the dogs could still get pregnant, the health of their puppies was negatively impacted.
People also search for: dog pregnancy problems · hypothyroidism in dogs · puppy survival rates · dog labor complications · low birth weight puppies
Abstract
Hypothyroidism in bitches has been reported to cause a variable interestrus interval, infertility, abortion, and stillbirth. The objective of this study was to evaluate the effect of experimentally induced hypothyroidism in bitches on fertility, pregnancy, parturition, and neonatal health. Eighteen healthy multiparous bitches were used; hypothyroidism was induced (by radioiodine administration) in nine bitches and the remaining nine served as untreated controls. After breeding, bitches were evaluated for pregnancy, fetal resorption, gestation length, litter size, duration and strength of uterine contractions (during parturition), interval between delivery of pups, viability of pups at birth, periparturient survival, and weight of pups at birth through 4 weeks of age. Bitches were bred a median of 19 weeks after induction of hypothyroidism. All bitches became pregnant and delivered term litters. There was no difference in the interestrus interval, litter size, or gestation length between hypothyroid and control bitches. Duration of uterine contractions was longer, but contraction strength was weaker in hypothyroid than control bitches; however, the interval between delivery of pups was not affected. Periparturient puppy mortality was significantly higher in litters from hypothyroid bitches. Viability scores and weight at birth were significantly lower in pups from hypothyroid bitches than controls. There was no difference between groups in pup weight gain during the first 4 weeks, in the interval from birth to the eyes opened, or to the onset of walking. Although hypothyroidism of relatively short duration did not affect fertility, it prolonged parturition and reduced pup survival in the periparturient period.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17512046/