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Query: UNIPROT:P01178 (oxytocin)
15,767 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Perinatal morbidity and mortality are known to be higher for the macrosomic neonate whose birth weight is 4500 g or more, compared with that of appropriate-weight term-size neonates. In a retrospective study comparing 287 macrosomic neonates with 284 appropriate-weight term-size neonates, we found that macrosomia occurred in 1.3% of our annual deliveries, with a male-to-female ratio of 2.3:1. Factors that occurred significantly more frequently in the mothers of macrosomic infants were maternal obesity, multiparity, diabetes mellitus, and previous delivery of an infant heavier than 4000 g. During the intrapartum period the incidence of labor augmentation by oxytocin, shoulder dystocia, and cesarean section was significantly greater in fetal macrosomia. Most significantly, this study revealed that macrosomia. Most significantly, this study revealed that macrosomic fetuses do not experience greater fetal distress in biophysically monitored labor than appropriate-weight term-size fetuses. Twenty-nine (10%) of the macrosomic infants required admission to the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) compared to 9 (3%) of the control patients (P less than 0.01). This excess neonatal morbidity in the macrosomic neonates was predominantly caused by the delivery process.
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PMID:Macrosomia--maternal, fetal, and neonatal implications. 736 96

The oxytocin challenge test (OCT) has been shown in other studies to be valuable in evaluating high-risk pregnancies. The purpose of this study was to show the relationship of various disease states and clinical conditions with OCT results and fetal performance in labor. Of a group of normal patients, 4% had positive OCTs or late decelerations (LDs) in labor. The incidence of positive OCTs or LDs in labor in patients with diabetes mellitus (DM) class B-R was 23.2%; in DM class A, 27.6%; in intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR), 26.2%; in pregnancy-induced hypertension (PIH), 27.6%; in chronic hypertension (CH), 13.6%; and in prolonged gestation, 10.8%. This study shows that DM of all classes, IUGR and PIH are the most likely conditions in which persistent LDs will occur.
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PMID:Electronic monitoring evidence of fetal distress in high-risk pregnancies. 737 91

Obesity has been associated in the literature with other pregnancy risks such as hypertension and diabetes mellitus, but disagreement persists about the expected course and complications of labor. Also, the effects of obesity on intrauterine growth and gestational duration have not been well defined. This study of 2746 consecutive deliveries used a computer-based uniform perinatal record to compare 300 pregnancy risk and outcome factors for obese and nonobese patients. The 279 obese women (more than 90 kg at some time during the pregnancy) were found to be older and of higher parity than the 2467 who were not obese. Those in the obese group were at increased antepartum risk and had increased frequencies of chronic hypertension, inadequate pregnancy weight gain, twin gestation, and diabetes mellitus. Oxytocin induction and repeat cesarean sections were performed more frequently for the obese patients, with no increase in complications during the current labor. The frequency of labor abnormalities, oxytocin augmentation, and primary cesarean section was similar to that of the comparison group. Examination of infant outcome revealed similar Apgar scores and perinatal mortality in the 2 groups, but fewer low-birth-weight infants (under 2500 g) and more macrosomic babies (over 4000 g) occurred in the obese population. This increase in birth weight was accounted for not only by an increase in the birth weight percentile, but also by a significant lengthening of the period of gestation.
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PMID:Obesity in pregnancy: risks and outcome. 742 89

The posterior lobe peptide oxytocin (OT) is known to control lactation and parturition, as well as maternal and sexual behavior. An antisense oligodeoxynucleotide (ODN) directed against the mRNA of OT was injected intracerebroventricularly 6 times in 12 hour intervals to manipulate the transcriptional message of OT in lactating rats. OT immunoreactivity in magnocellular hypothalamic nuclei and in the posterior lobe of the pituitary was reduced in antisense treated animals in comparison to ODN with scrambled base composition and vehicle controls. This decline in OT levels was associated with a decrease of pup weight. Our results demonstrate that central infusions of antisense ODN significantly reduce OT expression in vivo.
Exp Clin Endocrinol Diabetes 1995
PMID:Antisense oligodeoxynucleotide complementary to oxytocin mRNA blocks lactation in rats. 758 22

This study describes ultrastructural and morphometric changes in the arginine vasopressin (AVP)-like immunoreactive and oxytocin (OT)-like immunoreactive neurons in the hypothalamic paraventricular nuclei (PVN) and supraoptic nuclei (SON) of streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats at 1-12 months post-diabetes. At 1-6 months post diabetes, both AVP-immunoreactive and OT-immunoreactive neuronal somata were hypertrophied in the PVN and SON. These neuronal somata contained highly dilated rough endoplasmic reticulum in the cytoplasm. The reaction product for AVP as well as OT localization was dispersed throughout the cytoplasm and cell nucleus, but not within the nucleolus. Moreover, the reaction product appeared to be studded onto the ribosomes on dilated cisterns of the endoplasmic reticulum. At 9-12 months post-diabetes, both AVP-immunoreactive and OT-immunoreactive dendrites contained dilated endoplasmic reticulum, autophagic vacuoles, lipid bodies, microtubules, membranous bodies and occasionally swollen mitochondria. Labelled hypertrophied axonal profiles containing neurosecretory granules, autophagic vacuoles, membranous bodies and tubulovesicular elements were also observed in the neuropil. Morphometric study showed that both AVP-immunoreactive and OT-immunoreactive neuronal somata of the PVN and SON in the diabetic rats were markedly hypertrophied at all the time intervals examined. It is concluded that the morphometric changes observed represent hyperactivity of both AVP- and OT-immunoreactive neurons, while the concurrent ultrastructural changes observed at later stages may be indicative of degeneration.
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PMID:Arginine vasopressin- and oxytocin-like immunoreactive neurons in the hypothalamic paraventricular and supraoptic nuclei of streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats. 773 75

Hypothalamic mechanisms of neurohormone regulation of endocrine pancreas in diabetes mellitus, adaptation to hypoxia and their combination were studied on Wistar rats. To evaluate the condition of supraoptic nucleus (SON) secretory function, paraventricular subnuclei (PVH) of hypothalamus and endocrine pancreas, we used radioimmunoassay, immunocytochemical, morphometrical and histochemical methods. Hyperglycemia, hypoinsulinemia, glucagon and somatostatin synthesis and secretion intensification in diabetes mellitus is accompanied by marked reorganization of hypothalamic neurohormones (CRF, vasopressin, oxytocin) secretion with corresponding signs of activity increase of synthesizing their hypothalamus nuclei and subnuclei and also ACTH, corticosterone, cortisol rise in blood. Adaptation to hypoxia caused hypoglycemia, activated insulin biosynthesis, changed glucagon and somatostatin synthesis and secretion. CRF concentration, corticosterone and cortisol, ACTH in blood was not changed, vasopressin concentration lowered, oxytocin in median eminence of hypothalamus increased to a higher degree than in diabetes. Adaptation to hypoxia corrected impaired hormone balance and state of Langerhans islets (beta-cells destruction process inhibition, insulin biosynthesis stimulation, glucagon and somatostatin secretion decrease) in diabetes mellitus, hypothalamic neurohormones participating in this process.
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PMID:[The vasopressin-, oxytocin- and corticoliberin-synthesizing structures of the hypothalamus in rats with diabetes mellitus under hypoxic exposures]. 790 84

Hyperglycemia, hypoinsulinemia, and an increase of glucagon and somatostatin concentration under diabetes mellitus are accompanied by intensification of secretion of hypothalamic neurohormones (CRF, vasopressin, oxytocin, somatostatin) with the corresponding signs of the increase in activity of hypothalamus nuclei and subnuclei secreting them as well as ACTH, corticosterone and cortisol rise in blood. Adaptation to hypoxia has caused hypoglycemia, activated insulin biosynthesis, changed glucagon and somatostatin synthesis and secretion. CRF corticosterone, cortisol and ACTH concentration in blood was not changed, vasopressin concentration lowered, somatostatin and oxytocin amount (in hypothalamus) increased to a higher degree than under diabetes. Adaptation to hypoxia corrected impaired hormone balance and state of Langerhans islets (beta-cells destruction process inhibition, insulin biosynthesis stimulation, glucagon and somatostatin secretion decrease) under diabetes mellitus, hypothalamus neurohormones participating in this process.
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PMID:[Hypothalamic mechanisms of neurohormone regulation of the endocrine part of the pancreas]. 790 82

In the diabetic pregnant woman, together with monitoring of carbohydrate metabolism, it is of vital importance the fetal monitoring which includes: the dating of onset of pregnancy, the diagnosis of malformation, the evaluation of fetal health. The dating of onset of pregnancy can be calculated fairly precisely measuring echographically the vertex-sacrum length and the biparietal diameter carried out respectively in the first 12 and 20 weeks of amenorrhoea. The diagnosis of malformation can be effected by traditional echography or by transvaginal echography, a new method which allows an early diagnosis of serious malformation in high risk patients. Fetal health can be evaluated by the oxytocin test, non-stress test, biophysical profile and Doppler velocimeter. All these techniques have advantages and disadvantages, of which the most misleading is the high frequency of false positives (low specificity). In the diabetic pregnant woman, to foresee fetal maturity, it is advisable to utilize a more elevated lecithin-sphingomyelin ratio (over 3-3.5) than to non-diabetic pregnant women because of less precision of this test when diabetes is present. The dosage of phosphatidyl-glycerol in the amniotic fluid may also be useful. Echography evaluation of the fetal weight is reliable above all for low or normal weight while it is less so for fetuses of high weight. The ratio between cranium and abdomen circumferences is still considered one of the best indexes to foresee macrosomia.
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PMID:[Obstetric monitoring of the pregnant diabetic]. 796 33

The endocrine status of the pancreas and the hypothalamic neurosecretory nuclei were studied by radioimmunoassay, immunocytochemical, morphometric and histochemical methods in Wistar rats of both sexes with experimental diabetes mellitus. The development of diabetes mellitus was characterized by beta-cell destruction and insulin concentrations reduction in these cells and the blood, by increase of glucagon and somatostatin levels in the alpha- and delta-cells, respectively, as well as by the growth of these substances concentrations in the peripheral blood. These changes were parallelled by activation of the vasopressin-, oxytocin and corticoliberin-synthesizing neurones of the paraventricular and supraoptic nuclei of the hypothalamus, as evidenced by morphometric findings and by increase of the blood vasopressin and corticoliberin concentrations and oxytocin level in the hypothalamus. Experimental diabetes mellitus was found to be characterized by activation of the hypothalamo-hypophyseo-adrenal system. Functional differences in the contribution of vasopressin- and oxytocin-synthesizing neurones of the hypothalamic nuclei in the pathogenesis of the disease is shown, as are their sex-specific reactions.
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PMID:[Status of vasopressin-, oxytocin- and corticoliberin-synthesizing structures of the hypothalamus in experimental diabetes mellitus in rats of different sexes]. 805 64

The present study assessed the possible role of oxytocin in the deterioration of glucose tolerance in gestational diabetes. Plasma levels of oxytocin, insulin, glucagon and glucose were measured at the time of a 400-kcal breakfast meal tolerance test in 12 women with gestational diabetes and 12 normal pregnant women in the third trimester. The gestational diabetic women had higher basal levels of insulin and an enhanced, delayed and prolonged insulin response to the breakfast. The same differences occurred in the glucose levels. There was no significant difference in the glucagon levels between the two groups. In the normal pregnant women, a significant (p < 0.05) though small rise in glucagon levels occurred 30 min after the ingestion of the breakfast. Oxytocin levels were not affected by the breakfast, and there was no clear difference between the two groups. The metabolic differences between the normal pregnant and gestational diabetic women were not related to any differences in oxytocin levels. In conclusion, we found no evidence of a role of oxytocin in the alteration of glucose metabolism in women with gestational diabetes. However, since alterations in oxytocin levels of possible significance for an impaired glucose tolerance are found in type 1 diabetic and extremely obese patients, further studies are needed in women with gestational or manifest diabetes.
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PMID:Is oxytocin involved in the deterioration of glucose tolerance in gestational diabetes? 822 52


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