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Query: UNIPROT:P01178 (
oxytocin
)
15,767
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Parturition in sheep is initiated by a sharp rise in the rate of secretion of cortisol by the fetal adrenal. Increased secretion is due partly to enhanced responsiveness to corticotropin (ACTH) and partly to increased fetal concentrations of corticotropin.
Cortisol
acts on placental enzymes active in the biosynthesis of oestrogens from progesterone. Thus placental secretion of oestrogen increases and that of progesterone decreases. This change in the ratio of oestrogen: progesterone, particularly the rise in oestrogen, stimulates release of prostaglandin F2alpha (PGF2alpha) from the maternal placenta and to a lesser extent from the myometrium. PGF2alpha enhances the myometrial response to
oxytocin
and, after a latent period, stimulates contractions. The onset of parturition is normally associated with softening of the cervix, the mechanism of which is uncertain. Uterine contractions in the presence of a distensible cervix lead to parturition.
...
PMID:Parturition in the sheep. 20 98
Plasma cortisol was measured in cord and neonatal blood.
Cortisol
concentration in neonates decreased rapidly during the first three days after delivery and thereafter remained at an almost constant level. The more the delivery was stressful, the higher the cortisol in the 1-day-old infant, but the concentration came down to the same level as in the less stressful delivery on the 3rd day of the infants' life. The cortisol level in vaginal delivery after spontaneous labor was not different from that in vaginal delivery after
oxytocin
induced labor.
Cortisol
in small-for-date infants or infants with hyperbilirubinemia was lower than in average-for-date infants or infants without hyperbilirubinemia.
...
PMID:Plasma cortisol concentration in newborn infants. 60 42
Cortisol
was determined by a competitive protein-binding method in umbilical cord plasma from pregnancies of 37 or more weeks' gestation. In 162 cases of vaginal delivery following spontaneous labor the mean +/- S.E. of cortisol values was 7.43 +/- 0.29 mug per 100 ml. of plasma. This cortisol level was not significantly different from that observed in 51 cases of vaginal delivery after
oxytocin
-induced labor (6.53 +/- 0.49 mug per 100 ml.) or in 47 cases of delivery by emergency cesarean section following labor (6.21 +/- 0.66 mug per 100 ml.). The mean cortisol level in cases of elective cesarean section with no prior labor (4.67 +/- 0.60 mug per 100 ml.) was significantly less than the value for vaginal delivery after spontaneous or induced labor. The cord plasma and amniotic fluid concentrations of cortisol in a pregnancy complicated by fetal anencephaly and terminated at 44 weeks by induction were normal. It is concluded that labor and vaginal delivery resulted in a significant increase in cord plasma cortisol levels but there was no significant difference between spontaneous and induced labors. These findings do not support the hypothesis that a surge in fetal cortisol production immediately precedes and initiates spontaneous labor in human pregnancy.
...
PMID:Cortisol levels in umbilical cord plasma in relation to labor and delivery. 126 3
Plasma concentrations of
oxytocin
, prolactin, and cortisol were compared in five Swedish Red and White cows milked by hand versus machine. Cows were divided into two groups. One group was hand-milked; the other group was machine-milked. Treatments were switched every other day. The experiment was carried out for 6 d. Blood samples were taken prior to, during, and after milking and were assayed for hormones. More
oxytocin
and prolactin were released in hand-milked cows. There were no significant diurnal differences between the total amount of
oxytocin
released for the different treatments, but prolactin tended to be higher during hand-milking in the evening than in the morning milking.
Cortisol
concentrations were greater during hand-milking than during machine-milking. There were no significant treatment differences with regard to the total amount of cortisol released. During morning milking, cortisol concentrations were higher during hand-milking than during machine-milking. Our data show that hand-milking results in a pronounced and prolonged release of
oxytocin
and prolactin.
...
PMID:Endocrine responses in cows milked by hand and machine. 156 Jan 39
Uterine contractions in labour are influenced by endogenous substances such as oestrogens, progesterone, cortisol,
oxytocin
, prostaglandins, relaxin, adrenergic and cholinergic secretions, cyclic nucleotides and calcium ions. Effects of progesterone and oestrogens are complimentary as well as antagonistic to each other. They regulate formation of gap junctions, influx of calcium ions, synthesis of
oxytocin
, adrenergic receptors and of prostaglandins and cyclic nucleotides.
Cortisol
shares a role in a more complex endocrine trigger but is ineffective alone in the initiation of human labour. Adrenaline inhibits and noradrenaline promotes uterine contractions. Cholinergic stimulation increases cyclic GMP promoting uterine contractions. Calcium ions play a key role in uterine contractility.
Oxytocin
, prostaglandins E and F are powerful stimulants of uterine contractions. Prostaglandins stimulate pregnant uterus from early gestation unlike
oxytocin
which has little effect in the first and second trimester. They are extensively used for initiating labour and to arrest intractable atonic postpartum haemorrhage. In experiments and in vivo, their effects are modulated by other hormones and substances. With discovery of new drugs, knowledge of how they act on the uterus becomes important. The pharmacology of parturition that may help to understand the interaction of various agents on the pregnant uterus has been discussed.
...
PMID:Pharmacology of parturition. 202 68
Activation of the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis is suggested to play a role in the stress-related inhibition of LH secretion. The aim of our study was to investigate the effects of vasopressin and
oxytocin
, which are increased in pituitary portal plasma in response to stress, and of glucocorticoids, the final product of HPA activation during stress, on basal plasma LH levels and on pituitary LH response to the GnRH test in amenorrheic (n = 33) and fertile (n = 13) women. Plasma LH levels were evaluated by radioimmunoassay in 2 different experimental conditions: 1. Basal secretion; 2. The GnRH test (10 micrograms + 10 micrograms after a 120-minute interval). These 2 evaluations were done in the presence of both placebo and a pharmacological dose of desmopressin (an analogue of vasopressin) (16.6 ngr/minute),
oxytocin
(0.2 ngr/minute) or hydrocortisone (4.1 mg/minute). None of these drugs modified basal plasma LH levels either in amenorrheic patients or in controls.
Hydrocortisone
inhibited the GnRH-induced LH increase in amenorrheic women. These data suggest that the glucocorticoids might play a role in LH secretion and indicate a possible participation of the HPA axis in the impairment of the hypothalamus-pituitary-gonadal axis in women with psychogenic amenorrhea.
...
PMID:Glucocorticoids but not vasopressin or oxytocin inhibit luteinizing hormone secretion in patients with psychogenic amenorrhea. 272 8
beta-Endorphin (beta-EP), beta-lipotropin (beta-LPH) and cortisol plasma levels were measured during labor in 18 pregnant women. In 7 cases labor progressed spontaneously and in 11 cases
oxytocin
(5 mIU/min) was administered to stimulate uterine contractions. In control and
oxytocin
-treated subjects hourly blood samples were taken until delivery. In spontaneous labor all three hormones showed a progressive and significant increase until parturition. In
oxytocin
-treated patients, however, both beta-EP and beta-LPH remained constant until parturition.
Cortisol
levels in
oxytocin
-treated patients presented a significant increase but reached values significantly lower than in control patients. These results indicate that women with uterine hypocontractility during labor requiring
oxytocin
showed no rise in their plasma beta-EP and beta-LPH and a blunted cortisol rise during
oxytocin
administration.
...
PMID:Lack of beta-endorphin plasma level rise in oxytocin-induced labor. 316 Jun 39
Milk yield declined significantly between days 22 and 28 of lactation in rats, when lactation was extended by frequent replacement of older litters with younger ones. Corticosterone implants but not cortisol injections or implants prevented this decline.
Cortisol
, however, appeared to inhibit milk ejection since the mammary glands became engorged with milk and milk yield was improved dramatically by
oxytocin
injections. In both cases corticosteroid concentrations increased approximately threefold above basal concentrations. Both corticosteroids increased total mammary gland RNA content and lipoprotein lipase (LPL) activity of the mammary gland but were without effect on insulin binding. They also decreased LPL activity, lipogenesis and the number of insulin receptors on adipose tissue. Serum prolactin and insulin concentrations were unaffected by any of the treatments. The results suggest that corticosteroids inhibit milk ejection under certain conditions, may be circulating in lower concentrations, which thereby limit milk production, during prolonged lactation and may improve milk yield during extended lactation in part by suppressing anabolic activity in adipose tissue.
...
PMID:Stimulation of milk secretion with inhibition of milk ejection by corticosteroids during extended lactation in the rat. 649 78
Plasma concentrations of
oxytocin
and cortisol, and milk yield and flow rates, were compared in three primiparous cows and two cows in their second lactation during suckling and subsequent machine milking. After calving, cows suckled their calves for 3-4 weeks and then the experiment was carried out over 4 d. Blood samples were taken prior to, during and after suckling or evening machine milking (EMM) on day 1 of the experiment (the last day of suckling), day 2 (first EMM) and day 4 (third EMM). After weaning and rehousing, cows were machine milked twice daily. During the first EMM, average milk yield and flow rate in the second minute of milking were significantly lower (P < 0.05) than corresponding values for the other 2 d. Plasma
oxytocin
concentrations were lower during the first than during the third EMM (P < 0.001) and suckling (P < 0.001), and more
oxytocin
was released during the third EMM than during suckling (P < 0.01).
Cortisol
concentrations were higher during and after the first EMM than during the third EMM. Thus in cows sucked for several weeks after calving and then separated from their calves and rehoused we found a transient decrease in
oxytocin
release, milk yield and flow rates during the first machine milking.
...
PMID:Effect of suckling during early lactation and changeover to machine milking on plasma oxytocin and cortisol levels and milking characteristics in Holstein cows. 760 72
Glucocorticoid deficiency leads to elevated plasma vasopressin (AVP), while chronic endogenous hypercortisolism may inhibit osmotically stimulated AVP, suggesting that glucocorticoids may be feedback inhibitors of AVP secretion. We evaluated the effect of physiological increases in cortisol (65 mg/day iv) for 7 days on basal AVP and
oxytocin
(OT) in five conscious, male dogs.
Cortisol
increased from 1.3 +/- 0.1 to 5.0 +/- 0.8 micrograms/dl during infusion. Basal plasma AVP significantly decreased from 3.5 +/- 0.2 to 2.6 +/- 0.3 pg/ml during cortisol infusion. Plasma OT, osmolality, and sodium did not change while arterial pressure decreased (from 107 +/- 3 to 102 +/- 2 mmHg) on days 4 and 6. Increases in cortisol led to a physiologically significant, nonosmotic decrease in AVP. The effect was specific to AVP and independent of changes in arterial pressure. Glucocorticoid administration significantly decreased basal AVP within 24 h, which is comparable to the negative feedback control of adrenocorticotropic hormone. The inverse relationship between cortisol and AVP may account for the nonosmotic change in AVP in patients with disorders of glucocorticoid secretion.
...
PMID:Physiological increases in cortisol inhibit basal vasopressin release in conscious dogs. 802 23
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