Pharmacotherapy of preterm labor

Pharmacotherapy, 13(1), 28-36

PMID 8437965 Source

Abstract

Preterm labor is defined as the onset of uterine contractions in a woman who has completed less than 37 weeks of pregnancy. It may be due to maternal, placental, fetal, or idiopathic causes, and it is associated with a number of risk factors. Nondrug measures such as bedrest and hydration have been used alone or in combination with drug therapy to treat the disorder. Pharmacologic (tocolytic) agents include ethanol, progesterone, indomethacin, nifedipine, beta-adrenergic agonists, and magnesium salts. The three most commonly used drugs are ritodrine, terbutaline, and magnesium.

Topics

preterm labor pharmacotherapy, tocolytic agents preterm birth, ritodrine terbutaline preterm labor, magnesium sulfate preterm contractions, preventing premature delivery medications, beta-adrenergic agonists preterm labor, nifedipine indomethacin tocolysis, uterine contraction suppression drugs, preterm labor management options

Cite this article

Travis, B. E., & McCullough, J. M. (1993). Pharmacotherapy of preterm labor. *Pharmacotherapy*, *13*(1), 28-36.

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