A prospective comparison of terbutaline and magnesium for tocolysis

Obstetrics and gynecology, 80(5), 847-851

PMID 1407926 Source

Abstract

Objective

To compare the tocolytic efficacy and side effects of parenteral and oral magnesium and terbutaline.

Methods

Ninety-eight patients in labor between 23-35 weeks were prospectively entered into a controlled trial of intravenous and oral magnesium versus subcutaneous and oral terbutaline. Tocolytic effectiveness was judged by delay of delivery for 48 hours or 1 week, and to 37 weeks or more. The need to change therapy to the alternate drug was identified, as were side effects. Entrance characteristics of the population, initial pelvic examination, and concomitant infection or cervicovaginal isolates were noted. Outcomes included gestational age at delivery, birth weights, and Apgar scores. Outcome analysis was based on initial tocolytic therapy.

Results

Significantly more patients in the magnesium group delivered at 37 weeks or more: 34 of 46 versus 27 of 52 (P < .05). No significant differences were found for delivery by 48 hours or 1 week. The interval between treatment and delivery was greater for magnesium: 7.1 +/- 3.9 versus 5.0 +/- 3.2 weeks (P < .005). Failure to achieve 37 completed weeks was more often due to obstetric complications than to preterm labor itself. Tocolytic effectiveness was reduced if secondary therapy or re-treatment was required or if the patient had cervical dilatation of 3 cm or greater. Infectious complications were common but were not associated with tocolytic effectiveness. Side effects were more noticeable with oral magnesium and subcutaneous terbutaline.

Conclusions

For short-term tocolysis, no significant difference was found between magnesium and terbutaline. Magnesium was associated with a higher term delivery rate. Idiopathic preterm labor accounted for only a small part of the overall prematurity in the study population.

Topics

preterm labor tocolysis, magnesium versus terbutaline, stopping preterm contractions, medications to prevent early labor, tocolytic agent comparison, magnesium sulfate preterm birth, terbutaline subcutaneous preterm labor, prolonging pregnancy before 37 weeks, preterm labor treatment effectiveness, gestational age at delivery tocolytics, side effects magnesium tocolysis, idiopathic preterm labor management

Cite this article

Chau, A. C., Gabert, H. A., & Miller, J. M. (1992). A prospective comparison of terbutaline and magnesium for tocolysis. *Obstetrics and gynecology*, *80*(5), 847-851.

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