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Bovine Reproduction


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exposed skin and cover the damaged tissues with a length of orthopedic stockinette or other light bandage material. Frequent bandage changes and fresh application of dressings combined with daily cold water hosing should continue until the penis can be retracted into the prepuce. Continue preputial lavage with antiseptics and application of antibiotic ointments or emollients for at least a week after the penis is returned to the sheath. Even with aggressive early treatment, return to service is unlikely and the chance for a successful outcome decreases the longer treatment is delayed following injury.

Photo depicts paraphimosis following traumatic injury to the preputial trauma. The exposed penile and preputial epithelium desiccates rapidly and the free portion of the penis forms a spiral.

      Paraphimosis may sometimes be associated with the presence of a penile papilloma on the distal penis large enough to prohibit retraction through the preputial orifice. Surgical removal of the wart can be curative.

      Penile Hematoma (Rupture of the Tunica Albuginea of the Penis)

Photo depicts hematoma of the penis (rupture of tunica albuginea). Note the location of the swelling, dorsal to the penis and cranial to the scrotal neck.

      Source: Courtesy of Richard Hopper.

Photo depicts preputial prolapse associated with penile hematoma due to rupture of tunica albuginea of the penis.

      Rupture of the tunica albuginea is seldom life‐threatening, but the injury and the complications that follow can result in permanent loss of reproductive function. Potential complications following penile hematoma include abscess formation at the site of the hematoma, formation of adhesions between the penis and peripenile tissues, development of vascular shunts between the CCP and the surrounding vasculature, injury to the prolapsed preputial tissues, and destruction of the dorsal nerves of the penis. Injury to the dorsal nerves of the penis at the time of injury or by entrapment injury as scar tissues remodel can result in loss of sensation to the distal penis, rendering the bull unable to breed by natural service. Even following apparently successful management and resolution, recurrence of injury may occur during subsequent attempts at breeding [17].

      Inability to achieve or maintain penile erection (impotentia erigendi) precludes natural service. A history of failure to impregnate females in the breeding pasture or observation of unsuccessful breeding is often the presenting complaint. A well‐taken history including previous breeding performance, breeding injuries, and the owner's description of the appearance of the bull at the time of attempted coitus are valuable, but observation of the penis during an attempt at erection is a required element for diagnostic evaluation. Use of the electroejaculator to induce erection may be useful but a controlled test mating is preferred.

      Because painful stimuli from the spine, rear limbs, or pelvis may interfere with the willingness or ability of the bull to achieve erection and complete the breeding act, a physical examination of the bull at rest and in motion is mandatory. Appropriate management or correction of painful musculoskeletal and spinal conditions may be useful and return some bulls to breeding soundness.

      True erection failure may involve disruption of vascular components of the erection mechanism or failure of the corpus cavernosum to fill completely.

      Erection Failure Due to Vascular Shunts

      Sexual stimulation of the bull is followed by increased blood flow through the crura of the penis and into the CCP. This mechanism may be mimicked by stimulation with an electroejaculator. As discussed previously, the tunica albuginea encases the erectile tissues in the CCP and there are normally no functional venous outlets along the body or shaft of the penis at the time of erection, allowing the intact tunica albuginea to effectively