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Ovagen

Glu-Asp-Leu, Liver Bioregulator Peptide

Quick Stats
Studies 34
Trials 30
2010 pubmed 8 citations

Effects of low-dose follicle-stimulating hormone administration on follicular dynamics and preovulatory follicle characteristics in dairy cows during the summer.

Friedman. E E; Glick. G G; Lavon. Y Y; Roth. Z Z

Key Findings

  • Low‑dose FSH (100 mg or 4.4 mg Ovagen) increased the number of emerging follicles in cows.
  • Timing the FSH doses with follicular wave emergence slightly altered the size and timing of dominant follicles.
  • Overall, the low‑dose FSH gave only modest changes to the pre‑ovulatory follicle and did not improve its quality significantly.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, the findings don’t translate into a usable protocol for humans. The study is specific to dairy cow reproduction, so there’s no direct actionable advice for longevity, metabolic health, or performance enhancement in people.

Summary

This study looked at giving tiny amounts of a hormone called FSH (sold as Ovagen) to dairy cows during hot weather to see if it helps their ovaries make better eggs. The researchers found that low doses can boost the number of developing follicles, but the benefits to the final egg‑producing follicle were small and the results are specific to cows, not people.

Abstract

The well-documented phenomenon of reduced conception rate in dairy cows during the hot season involves impaired functioning of the ovarian follicles and their enclosed oocytes. Three experiments were performed to examine the administration of low doses of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) to induce turnover of follicles that are damaged upon summer thermal stress and to examine whether this FSH administration has beneficial effects on preovulatory follicles. In experiment 1, synchronized heifers were treated with 100 mg of Folltropin-V (n = 7) or 4.4 mg of Ovagen (n = 6) on day 3 of the estrous cycle. Treatment with both FSH sources resulted in greater (P < 0.05) numbers of follicles than in control animals (n = 12) on day 6 of the estrous cycle, indicating that low doses of FSH can increase the number of emerging follicles in a follicular wave. In experiment 2, milking cows were assigned to a control group (n = 4) or treated with 2.2 mg (FSH-2.2; n = 6) or 4.4 mg (FSH-4.4; n = 5) Ovagen. Follicle-stimulating hormone was administrated on day 3 or 4 and day 10 or 11 of the estrous cycle, coinciding with emergence of the first and second follicular waves, respectively. The number of follicles emerging during the first wave tended to be higher (P < 0.1) in FSH-4.4-treated cows than in controls. The second-wave dominant follicles emerged 2 d later in the treated cows and were smaller in diameter (P < 0.05) than controls, 2 d before aspiration. Despite being younger, the preovulatory follicles of FSH-4.4 cows expressed a steroidogenic capacity that was similar to controls with a tendency toward greater insulin concentrations (P < 0.09). In experiment 3, milking cows were assigned to a control group (n = 6) or treated with 4.4 mg Ovagen (FSH-4.4; n = 6). Follicle-stimulating hormone was administrated on day 3 and day 12 or 13 of the estrous cycle. The number of emerging follicles was higher (P < 0.05) in the treated vs control cows. However, the features of the preovulatory follicle developed in the subsequent cycle did not differ between groups. In summary, low doses of FSH can efficiently induce follicular turnover accompanied by a modest effect on the preovulatory follicle of the treated cycle. It appears that the administration of low doses of FSH, precisely timed to synchronize with the emergence of follicular waves, might have a beneficial effect on the preovulatory follicle and its enclosed oocyte.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2010

Date

2010-03-26T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.domaniend.2010.02.008

Citations

8

References

39