The aim of this study was to assess the dose (300 to 600 IU) effects of equine chorionic gonadotropin (eCG) on the preovulatory follicle diameter, growth rate and time of ovulation characterized by echography. The eCG was injected at the end (D 0 ) of the 7-day treatment with a controlled internal device release (CIDR®) and a PGF 2α being injected 2 days before the removal of the CIDR® (d −2 ). The 120 N'Dama female were distributed into five experimental groups. The control group (n=26) was treated with physiological saline at the removal of the CIDR®, while the animals in the four treated groups received, respectively, 300 IU (n=25), 400 IU (n=24), 500 IU (n=22) and 600 IU (n=23) of eCG. The diameter of the preovulatory follicle was significantly higher (P<0.05) in the animals treated with 300 IU (10.1±1.4 mm) than in untreated animals (9.3±1.2 mm). Follicle growth rate was significantly (P<0.05) higher in treated animals (1.0± 0.4 mm/day) than in the control group (0.9±0.4 mm/day). The average interval between the time of eCG injection and ovulation was similar in the non-treated (83.7±14.4 h) and treated animals (79.7±11.9). Treated animals showed a significant increase in the percentage of ovulation (94.7 % compared to 73.1 %) (P<0.01). Use of eCG contributed towards synchronising the time of ovulation between 72 to 96 h, which would facilitate the use of systematic insemination.
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