PLoS ONE (Jan 2021)

Effect of maternal oxytocin on umbilical venous and arterial blood flows during physiological-based cord clamping in preterm lambs.

  • Fiona J Stenning,
  • Graeme R Polglase,
  • Arjan B Te Pas,
  • Kelly J Crossley,
  • Martin Kluckow,
  • Andrew W Gill,
  • Euan M Wallace,
  • Erin V McGillick,
  • Corinna Binder,
  • Douglas A Blank,
  • Calum Roberts,
  • Stuart B Hooper

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0253306
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 6
p. e0253306

Abstract

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BackgroundDelayed umbilical cord clamping (UCC) after birth is thought to cause placental to infant blood transfusion, but the mechanisms are unknown. It has been suggested that uterine contractions force blood out of the placenta and into the infant during delayed cord clamping. We have investigated the effect of uterine contractions, induced by maternal oxytocin administration, on umbilical artery (UA) and venous (UV) blood flows before and after ventilation onset to determine whether uterine contractions cause placental transfusion in preterm lambs.Methods and findingsAt ~128 days of gestation, UA and UV blood flows, pulmonary arterial blood flow (PBF) and carotid arterial (CA) pressures and blood flows were measured in three groups of fetal sheep during delayed UCC; maternal oxytocin following mifepristone, mifepristone alone, and saline controls. Each successive uterine contraction significantly (pConclusionsWe found no evidence that amplification of uterine contractions with oxytocin increase placental transfusion during DCC. Instead they decreased both UA and UV flow and caused a net loss of blood from the lamb. Uterine contractions did, however, have significant cardiovascular effects and reduced systemic and cerebral oxygenation.