This study was carried out to determine the relationship between postpartum intrauterine
infections, endocrine patterns and the function of corpora lutea formed following the first postpartum ovulations in dairy cows. Blood samples were collected daily starting from the day of parturition until 30 d after parturition or until the second postpartum estrus, whichever occurred first. Sera were assayed for
progesterone (P4),
prostaglandin F2alpha metabolite (
PGFM), and
luteinizing hormone (LH) concentrations. Palpations per rectum and real-time ultrasound scanning of the reproductive tracts were carried out in all cows once every 4 d for 1 mo, starting from Day 4 after parturition. In addition, endometrial swabs were collected aseptically from each cow once every 4 d during the first month postpartum. The swabs were cultured for aerobic and anaerobic bacteria. Twelve cows (60%) exhibited short estrous cycles (SC; 6 to 14 d long) following first postpartum ovulations. The mean preovulatory LH surges and LH patterns during the first postpartum cycles were similar in both groups, leading us to believe that lack of luteotrophic stimulation was not
a factor in the occurrence of SC. Bacterial isolations were frequent in SC cows. The occurrence of moderate to heavy bacterial growth patterns and the repeated isolations of the similar organisms during postpartum suggests the persistence of uterine
infections in SC cows. Increases in
PGFM concentrations prior to luteolysis in SC cows were associated with moderate to heavy
infection. Thus, postpartum uterine
infections do not appear to affect ovulations, but
prostaglandin (
PGF2alpha) released in response to uterine
infection may contribute to early demise of the corpus luteum formed after the first postpartum ovulation.