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Query: UNIPROT:P01178 (
oxytocin
)
15,767
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The Eisenmenger syndrome carries a high mortality rate in a women during delivery and the immediate postpartum period. It has been suggested that marked changes in shunt flow and pulmonary hemodynamics may be responsible. These functions were studied under various physiologic and pharmacologic conditions during labor and delivery in a patient with the Eisenmenger syndrome. Uterine contractions were associated with a decrease in the ratio of pulmonary to systemic blood flow (Qp/Qs) from 1.58 to 1.05. The Qp/Qs ratio also decreased (to 0.83) when forceps were applied during uterine contractions. Epidural
anesthesia
,
oxytocin
and the supine position did not adversely affect pulmonary hemodynamics or shunt flow. On the basis of these results, if pregnancy cannot be terminated in a patient with the Eisenmenger syndrome, it is recommended that the patient be given high concentration of oxygen and epidural
anesthesia
and that serial arterial blood gas determinations be performed to detect changes in shunt flow.
...
PMID:Shunt flow and pulmonary hemodynamics during labor and delivery in the Eisenmenger syndrome. 15 Jul 87
The effect of increased concentration of vasopressin and
oxytocin
in the cerebrospinal fluid on the excitability of the hypoglossal nerve nucleus was investigated. The experiments were carried out on rats under chloralose
anaesthesia
. Retractory jerks of the outstretched tongue were evoked by supra- or infraorbital nerve stimulation during perfusion of the cerebral ventricles with McIlwain-Rodnight solution. The solution contained synthetic arginine vasopressin 0.05 U/ml or synthetic
oxytocin
0.05 U/ml. Perfusion of the ventricles with vasopressin increased and perfusion with
oxytocin
decreased the evoked tongue jerks.
...
PMID:Effect of vasopressin and oxytocin perfusion of the cerebral ventricles on evoked tongue jerks. 21 38
Scanlon's neurobehavioral tests were administered to 274 neonates on the 1st and 2nd days of life. Ketamine-N2O
anesthesia
had been given to 45 mothers, thiopental-N2O to 52, and lumbar extradural
anesthesia
with chloroprocaine to 177. All babies delivered from mothers receiving meperidine within 5 hours of delivery were excluded. All babies tested were over 2500 grams in weight, apparently normal, and with Apgar scores of at least 8 at 1 minute and 10 at 5 minutes. All were delivered from healthy women aged 18 to 35 years following a normal labor. Lumbar extradural
anesthesia
was associated with the greatest percentage of high scores on both the 1st and 2nd days for overall assessment, tone, rooting, sucking, Moro's response, placing, alertness, and habituation to pinprick. The scores were lowest after thiopental and intermediate following ketamine. No relationship was found between neurobehavior and low-forceps extraction,
oxytocin
augmentation, parity, or duration of labor.
...
PMID:Neonatal neurobehabioral tests following vaginal delivery under ketamine, thiopental, and extradural anesthesia. 56 Jan 43
The effect of enflurane on uterine contractility was studied in sexually mature rabbits in which intrauterine balloon catheters had been implanted. Three animal groups were studied: untreated; treated with estrogen-progesterone; and 27 to 28 days pregnant. The effects of 1.5 percent or 3.0 percent enflurane were quantitated by measuring contraction frequency and amplitude during an anesthetically steady state. The effects of prior
anesthesia
with 1.5 percent enflurane on uterine responses to 1.5 IU
oxytocin
IV were also evaluated. Neither 1.5 percent of 3.0 percent enflurane altered contraction amplitude or frequency in the 3 groups of rabbits. However, the amplitude of the contractile response to
oxytocin
30 minutes following enfluane was significantly depressed. The results indicate that, while the intact rabbit uterus under different hormonal influences is not depressed by 1.5 or 3.0 percent enflurane, its response to
oxytocin
following enflurane is decreased.
...
PMID:Enflurane and uterine contractility in rabbits. 56 51
Release of
oxytocin
and Substance P-like peptides from the rat posterior pituitary lobe incubated in situ after infusion of hypertonic solution into the third cerebral ventricle. Acta Physiol. Pol., 1978, 29 (1): 9-16. The experiments were carried out on male rats. Under general urethane and chloralose
anaesthesia
the ventral surface of the hypothalamus and the pituitary gland were exposed by a transpharyngeal approach and the anterior pituitary lobe was entirely removed. The posterior lobe with the remaining neural and partially vascular connections with the hypothalamus was incubated in situ.
Oxytocin
and Substance P-like peptides were assayed biologically in six 20-min samples of the fluid outflow from the posterior pituitary lobe incubated in situ. At the beginning of collection of the fourth sample a hypertonic solution was infused into the third ventricle through a micropipette. This infusion increased significantly the release of
oxytocin
and insignificantly that of Substance P-like pepides from the posterior pituitary lobe into the incubation fluid.
...
PMID:Release of oxytocin and substance P-like peptides from the rat posterior pituitary lobe incubated in situ after infusion of hypertonic solution into the third cerebral ventricle. 56 6
Serial radioimmunoassay measurements of plasma
oxytocin
(OT) in maternal venous blood have been carried out in 15 patients, during pregnancy, labor, and delivery. Fetal plasma OT was also measured in the blood from the umbilical vein and umbilical artery. The results indicate that: (1) during pregnancy, plasma OT is present in maternal blood; (2) the quantity of plasma OT increases with advancing pregnancy; (3) no OT surge occurs around the onset of labor; (4) the plasma OT surge occurs with cervical dilatation and vaginal distention. The data indicate that OT does not play a primary role in the initiation of labor and support the concept that OT most likely contributes to formation of prostaglandins through the uterine contractions OT produces. OT surges, frequently called spikes, have been observed to occur during pregnancy as well as during labor. During the course of labor, OT surges have been encountered in association with rupture of the membranes, vaginal examination, and descent of the vertex, and have occurred almost consistently with maximal cervical and vaginal distention. Such OT surge was suppressed by effective spinal and pelvic regional
anesthesia
. Therefore, this surge is consistent with the Ferguson reflex described in experimental animals, and it represents the first evidence that the Ferguson reflex, in fact, exists in human beings. Evidence is presented here that an excess of OT in fetal blood over that found in maternal plasma was associated with hypertonic, irregular, tumultuous or prolonged labor and with mild to moderate fetal hypoxia and fetal distress peculiar to abnormal uterine contractions.
...
PMID:Plasma oxytocin in initiation of labor. 62 65
A retrospective study of 12 461 single births confirmed an association between maternal
oxytocin
infusion and neonatal jaundice. The effect of
oxytocin
on jaundice was independent of gestational age at birth, sex, race, epidural
anaesthesia
, method of delivery, and birth weight, each of which was significantly associated with neonatal jaundice. The effect of
oxytocin
was, however, small, producing a calculated mean increase in peak plasma bilirubin concentration of 8.6 mumol/1 (0.5 mg/100 ml); this excess was independent of sex and less than the effect of the baby being born one week earlier.
...
PMID:Factors influencing the incidence of neonatal jaundice. 64 11
Postpartum uterine pressures were measured in healthy women with an intrauterine microballoon before, during, and after administration of different concentrations of halothane or enflurane. Arterial blood samples for anesthetic levels were obtained at intervals. Frequency and intensity of contractions diminished markedly when blood levels exceeded the equivalent of 1/2 MAC (minimum alveolar anesthetic concentration which produces immobility in one-half of subjects exposed to a noxious stimulus) of nonpregnant adults, but normal patterns returned promptly on lightening of
anesthesia
. Response to 10 mU of
oxytocin
was suppressed at blood levels corresponding to between 3/4 and 1 MAC of the agents. Halothane and enflurane exert equipotent dose-related reversible effects on the activity of the full-term pregnant human uterus.
...
PMID:Postpartum uterine pressures under halothane or enflurance anesthesia. 66 48
The role of
oxytocin
in the increase in utero-ovarian venous prostaglandin F (PGF) level caused by vaginal distension was investigated by using lumbar epidural
anaesthesia
to block the
oxytocin
secretion reflex. Whereas vaginal distension raised jugular venous
oxytocin
and utero-ovarian venous PGF levels in untreated sheep, neither response occurred after lumbar
anaesthesia
. Lumbar
anaesthesia
had no effect on the rise in utero-ovarian venous PGF level caused by administered
oxytocin
. These findings support the suggestion that a reflex release of
oxytocin
is involved in the elevation of utero-ovarian venous PGF observed after vaginal distension in parturient sheep.
...
PMID:Blockade of the Ferguson reflex by lumbar epidural anaesthesia in the parturient sheep: effects on oxytocin secretion and uterine venous prostaglandin F levels. 74 73
Intra-arterial injections of bradykinin into the hindlimb of the rabbit cause two types of cardiovascular reflex effects displayed in succession. The first-type effects appear early and are of inhibitory nature, being represented by systemic hypotension, contralateral hindlimb vasodilation and bradycardia; the second-type effects appear later and are excitatory in nature, consisting of hypertension, hindlimb vasoconstriction and tachycardia and occur closely associated with behavioral manifestations typical of the reaction to pain. Both the depressor and pressor effects are accompanied by hyperventilation. Analogous biphasic reflex responses may be caused by intraarterial injections of potassium ions. On the contrary, hypertonic solutions (NaCl, glucose) usually only produce second-type excitatory responses. No significant cardiocirculatory reflex effects are induced by even high doses of serotonin, nicotine, adenosine, adenosine triphosphate, adrenalin, noradrenalin, angiotensin, vasopressin and
oxytocin
. General
anesthesia
greatly inhibits the pressor reflexes and potentiates the depressor responses (to bradykinin and K ions) but does not appear to be a necessary condition for provoking depressor reflexes by chemical stimulation of somatic afferents. Both chemoreflex responses are prevented by sectioning the somatic nerves of the injected limb. Denervation of sinoaortic areas and of cardiopulmonary receptors by bilateral cervical vagotomy or complete removal of the skin from the injected limb does not prevent either type of chemoreflex response. These depressor and pressor chemoreflexes have been ascribed to activation of two functionally distinct types of sensory receptors in the skeletal muscle, differently sensitive to chemical substances and selectively concerned with different patterns of cardiocirculatory reflex response.
...
PMID:Cardiovascular and respiratory chemoreflexes from the hindlimb sensory receptors evoked by intra-arterial injection of bradykinin and other chemical agents in the rabbit. 76 67
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