1962
DOI: 10.1136/bmj.2.5313.1157
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Effect of Oestrogens on Myometrial Contractions

Abstract: Some observations by Jeffcoate (1938) (Reynolds, 1949).The work of Csapo (1956) shows that during pregnancy progesterone reduces myometrial contractility. Short and Moore (1959) have shown that at the onset of labour there is no fall in blood progesterone, nor according to Shearman (1959) does the output of urinary pregnanediol decline in the weeks before the onset of labour. It is possible that toward the end of pregnancy some endocrine factor which overcomes the progesterone block on myometrial contractility… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Our attention was first directed to a possible specific role of oestriol by the finding of Klopper and Billiewicz (1963) that women with a higher urinary oestriol excretion tended to go into labour before those with a lower output. Klopper and Dennis (1962), however, failed to find any effect from oestriol or stilboestrol given by mouth on the induction-delivery interval or on the length of labour following artificial rupture of the membranes. Thus in the light of subsequent findings the absence of any demonstrable effect following oestriol by mouth was probably due to two reasons.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 82%
“…Our attention was first directed to a possible specific role of oestriol by the finding of Klopper and Billiewicz (1963) that women with a higher urinary oestriol excretion tended to go into labour before those with a lower output. Klopper and Dennis (1962), however, failed to find any effect from oestriol or stilboestrol given by mouth on the induction-delivery interval or on the length of labour following artificial rupture of the membranes. Thus in the light of subsequent findings the absence of any demonstrable effect following oestriol by mouth was probably due to two reasons.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 82%
“…It would be a therapeutic advance if the onset of labour could be influenced by the administration of such a physiological compound. In our previous trial (Klopper and Dennis, 1962), we were concerned with the effect of oral administration of free oestriol on the onset of labour. It may be that the failure of oestriol to have any effect on that occasion was due to the fact that insufficient steroid or an inactive combination reached the myometrium and that manipulations of the endocrine environment of the myometrium from within the uterus may be more successful in imitating the natural course of events.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The oestrogen preparations used varied. One study (Klopper 1962) used oral tablets, one used intravenous infusion (Pinto 1967), two used extra-amniotic oestrogen (Peedicayil 1990, Quinn 1981) and three used intravaginal oestrogen cream (Larmon 2002, Magann 1995, Tromans 1981 Five studies compared oestrogen with placebo. The oestrogen was delivered as oral tablets in one trial (Klopper 1962), as an intravenous infusion in another (Peedicayil 1990), as an extraamniotic formulation in two studies (Pinto 1967;Quinn 1981) and a vaginal oestrogen cream in one study (Larmon 2002).…”
Section: • Excluded Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One study using intravaginal cream in the intervention arm (Larmon 2002 with 87 women) was undertaken in an outpatient setting. Three studies did not state if the study had been conducted in an inpatient or outpatient setting, the first used oral oestradiol tablets (Klopper 1962), the second (Magann 1995) used vaginal cream, and the third (Peedicayil 1990) used extra-amniotic oestrogen.…”
Section: • Excluded Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%