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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Semen quality and time to sterility in tom cats after deslorelin

By Romagnoli, Stefano et al.·Published in Journal of feline medicine and surgery·2017·Department of Animal Medicine, Italy·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Semen quality and interval to sterility in tom cats treated with a 9.4 mg deslorelin implant.

Species:
cat
Drinking & peeingCats

Plain-English summary

A group of healthy adult male cats were treated with a deslorelin implant to control their reproductive behavior and fertility. Initially, some cats showed slight improvements in semen quality, but overall, the quality began to decline after about a month. By 72 days after treatment, all the cats were confirmed to be sterile. This treatment can effectively manage male cat fertility, with complete sterility achieved within a couple of months.

People also search for: male cat fertility treatment · deslorelin implant for tom cats · how long for cat to become sterile after deslorelin

Abstract

Objectives Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) agonists like deslorelin are being increasingly used in tom cats for their efficacy in controlling reproductive behaviour and fertility. Deslorelin implants have been widely available in Europe since 2008. Little, if anything, is known about the interval between treatment and onset of sterility, as well as semen quality, after treatment in tom cats. The purpose of this study was to investigate semen quality and interval to sterility in tom cats treated with a 9.4 mg deslorelin implant. Methods Fifteen healthy adult tom cats were treated with a 9.4 mg deslorelin implant (Suprelorin 12). For each cat, semen collection and a GnRH stimulation test (intramuscular administration of 50 μg gonadorelin [Fertagyl], followed by blood sampling 1 h later, to assay serum testosterone) were performed on the first consultation and then repeated every 15 days until complete sterility was achieved. Semen collection was performed by introducing a 14 cm, open-end feline catheter (Argyle) 9 cm into the distal urethra 10 mins after sedation by intramuscular injection of 100 μg/kg medetomidine (Domitor). Results Semen collection was not successful in all cats at each attempt. In the first month after treatment, the semen of only four cats could be evaluated, while the semen of eight cats could be evaluated during the second and third months of the study. Semen quality (ejaculate volume, progressive motility and morphological abnormalities) improved slightly during the first 19-25 days in 2/4 cats, and in 1/4 cats motility was still very high (80%) 25 days post-treatment (PT), but we have no data regarding fertility prior to treatment in this cat. The last cat never produced spermatozoa. Subsequently, semen quality gradually worsened in all cats from 30 days onwards. At 70 days PT, one cat was still potentially fertile. After 72 days all cats were sterile. Conclusions and relevance Semen quality increased slightly in treated cats during the first month after treatment, and then gradually decreased over the following months. Complete sterility was reached within 40-72 days following implantation.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26763267/