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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Mycoplasma bacteria do not affect semen quality in healthy dogs

By Domrazek, K et al.·Published in Theriogenology·2024·Department of Small Animal Diseases and Clinic·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: The lack of the influence of various species of Mycoplasma spp. on canine semen quality.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A study found that many healthy male dogs carry different types of Mycoplasma bacteria in their reproductive tract, but these bacteria do not seem to affect semen quality. In fact, most of the dogs tested had normal sperm counts and motility, regardless of whether they carried Mycoplasma or not. Even in dogs with no sperm present (azoospermia), the presence of Mycoplasma was not linked to infertility. This suggests that Mycoplasma may be a normal part of a dog's microbiome without causing any health issues.

People also search for: dog semen quality Mycoplasma · why is my dog infertile · azoospermia in dogs · canine reproductive health

Abstract

Mycoplasmas colonize fish, reptiles, birds and mammals, being commensals or causing diseases, sometimes severe in ruminants, swine, poultry, or wildlife animals. So far, 15 species of canine Mycoplasma spp. have been described. Conflicting results have been presented regarding the pathogenicity of Mycoplasma spp. Although many virulence factors of these bacteria have been described, they still require attention. The main aim of our study was to evaluate the presence of known canine Mycoplasmas in the male reproductive tract of clinically healthy dogs. The second aim was to check if Mycoplasma spp. cause any abnormalities in semen quality that could have further consequences and to propose the schemes for managing the carriers. 83.3% of examined dogs were Mycoplasma spp. -positive dogs, and most of them were the carriers of more than one species. Six dogs had azoospermic ejaculates. The total spermatozoa numbers were similar in Mycoplasma -positive and negative groups. Motility was slightly higher in Mycoplasma spp.-negative group, but the difference was not statistically significant. There was no significant difference in semen characteristics between the carriers and Mycoplasma spp.-negative dogs. Neither the individual species nor the number of species strains had a significant effect on sperm morphological parameters as well as viability. Semen quality parameters are not correlated with the species found on the prepuce. Over 70% Mycoplasma spp.- positive dogs have more than one species of this bacteria. Despite finding mycoplasmas in azoospermic dogs, we suggest that they were not the cause of infertility. Mycoplasma spp. could be a part of normal microbiota in canine prepuce in individuals without any clinical signs.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38402701/