GLOSSARY - SMALL ANIMAL REPRODUCTION

Aspermia
Aspermia is lack of ejaculation of any fluid or spermatozoa during manual semen collection.
Asthenozoospermia
Asthenozoospermia is abnormally low percentage of progressively motile (moving) spermatozoa. Normal percentage progressive motility of canine spermatozoa is 70% or greater.
Azoospermia
Azoospermia is ejaculation of seminal fluid containing no spermatozoa.
Balanoposthitis
Balanoposthitis is inflammation of the mucosa of the penis and prepuce. It may occur secondary to allergies or may be due to direct infection.
Benign prostatic hypertrophy
Benign prostatic hypertrophy (BPH) is an age-related increase in size of the prostate which occurs in dogs and humans.
Brucellosis
Brucellosis is an infectious disease caused by the organism Brucella canis. The organism is most commonly spread by ingestion from infected urine or tissues, but may also be spread venereally. Screening tests are readily available. Brucellosis is not curable in dogs.
Corpus luteum (plural = corpora lutea; CL)
The corpus luteum forms at the site of ovulation on the ovary, and produces progesterone.
Cryptorchidism
Cryptorchidism is lack of descent of one or both testes into the scrotum. Dogs are not definitively diagnosed as cryptorchid until they are 6 months of age. Cryptorchidism is hereditary in dogs, and probably in cats.
Extender
Spermatozoa that are to be preserved for shipment or freezing are maintained in extenders, liquid media that provide nutrients, buffer the pH of the solution,and protect the spermatozoa from cold shock.
False pregnancy
All dogs go through the hormonal changes of pregnancy after having gone through heat, whether or not they were bred. Two months after heat, when hormone levels fall, some dogs exhibit mothering behaviors and mammary development, and may produce milk. This condition is a normal physiologic change in dogs and is not associated with reproductive tract disease.
Follicle
Follicles are structures lined with hormone-producing cells on the ovary that contain at least one egg. Development of the follicle, with subsequent secretion of estrogen, causes characteristic signs of heat in dogs (vulvar swelling, exudation of bloody vaginal discharge).
Mammary hypertrophy
This is a benign, hormone-dependent enlargement of the mammary glands in cats.
Mastitis
Mastitis is inflammation of the mammary glands. This usually is due to bacterial infection and most commonly occurs during lactation after parturition.
Metritis
Metritis is inflammation of the uterus due to bacterial infection. This most commonly occurs after whelping and is curable with appropriate antibiotic therapy.
Neoplasia
Neoplasia is cancer. Tumors can arise in all the reproductive organs of the dog. The most common reproductive tract tumors seen are mammary (breast) neoplasia and testicular neoplasia.
Oligozoospermia
Oligozoospermia is abnormally low total number of spermatozoa in an ejaculate. Normal total number of spermatozoa in a canine ejaculate is 300 million to 2 billion.
Orchitis
Orchitis is inflammation of the testes. Causes include trauma and infection; brucellosis can be a cause of orchitis in dogs.
Ovulation
Ovulation is release of eggs from the follicle(s) on the ovary into the uterine tubes (oviducts) where they mature and are fertilized.
Prostatitis
Prostatitis is inflammation of the prostate. Bacterial infection of the prostate occurs secondary to some other complaint, such as BPH or prostatic neoplasia.
Pyometra
Pyometra is uterine infection overlying an age-related change of the uterine lining (cystic endometrial hyperplasia). Ovariohysterectomy (spaying) is the best treatment for pyometra.
Queening
Queening is the name given to parturition (giving birth) in cats.
Semen
Semen is composed of seminal fluid, which is excreted from the prostate in dogs and from the prostate and bulbourethral glands in cats, and spermatozoa.
Teratozoospermia
Teratozoospermia is abnormally low percentage of normally shaped spermatozoa. Normal percentage of normally shaped canine spermatozoa is 80% or greater.
Theriogenology
Theriogenology is derived from the Greek (therio = beast, gen = birth, ology = study of). It is the term used to describe the specialty of veterinary reproduction.
Vaginal prolapse
This is benign, hormone-dependent enlargement of the vaginal lining, with subsequent prolapse of the tissue through the vulvar lips, that occurs in dogs.
Vaginitis
Vaginitis is inflammation of the vagina. It can occur in dogs before puberty (puppy or juvenile vaginitis); this condition usually resolves with increasing age and may resolve if the dog is allowed to go through one heat cycle. Adult-onset vaginitis most commonly occurs secondary to chronic urinary tract disease, identified by analysis and culture of urine, or secondary to anatomical abnormalities of the vagina, identified by investigation of the vagina by vaginoscopy or vaginography.
Whelping
Whelping is the name given to parturition (giving birth) in dogs.

Back to home page


The views and opinions expressed in this page are strictly those of the page author.
The contents of this page have not been reviewed or approved by the University of Minnesota.