Oxytocin infusion dose-response to maintain uterine tone in obese elective cesarean patients: a randomized controlled trial
Qin-Fang Yan, Ling Ai, Yi-Min Huang, Jianguo Wang, Fei Xiao, Huiqin Xu, Xue-Dong Tang

TL;DR
This study finds that obese women need higher oxytocin infusion doses after a cesarean to maintain proper uterine tone.
Contribution
The study determines the optimal oxytocin infusion dose for obese women undergoing elective cesarean delivery.
Findings
The ED50 and ED90 for oxytocin infusion in obese patients were 11.0 IU/h and 19.1 IU/h.
Higher infusion rates reduced the need for rescue oxytocin.
Obese patients require higher prophylactic oxytocin doses to prevent uterine atony.
Abstract
For cesarean delivery (CD), the 90% effective dosage (ED90) of oxytocin for a first bolus has been established. It is not yet known how much oxytocin to inject into obese women undergoing elective discectomy to keep their uterine tone (UT) appropriate. We hypothesized that patients who are overweight need a greater dose of oxytocin infusion; thus, we aimed to determine how the dose-response curve for oxytocin infusion changes following an initial 1 international unit (IU) bolus in obese women undergoing elective CD. One hundred parturients with a body mass index (BMI) greater than 30 kg/m2 were randomly assigned to receive an infusion rate of 14, 18, 22, or 26 IU/h of oxytocin. When the uterine palpation is as hard as touching the forehead or tip of the nose, it is considered sufficient UT according to the criteria used by obstetricians. The median effective dose (ED50) and ED90 values…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMaternal and Perinatal Health Interventions · Maternal and fetal healthcare · Neuroendocrine regulation and behavior
