Publications by authors named "C Meier Magistretti"

Article Synopsis
  • * Aim: The study aims to systematically review the effects of synthetic oxytocin on the oxytocin levels in mothers and newborns during and after labor, examining potential impacts on their natural hormone systems.
  • * Results: Administration of synthetic oxytocin significantly increased maternal levels in a dose-dependent manner, with higher rates achieving levels 2-3 times normal. Newborns showed elevated oxytocin levels, which were notably higher in the umbilical artery than in the umbilical vein, indicating active production by the fetus during labor.
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Article Synopsis
  • Oxytocin is essential for childbirth, with synthetic versions commonly used to help induce or speed up labor, which led researchers to review its levels in mothers during natural childbirth and in response to synthetic infusions.
  • A systematic search of medical databases was conducted, resulting in 20 studies that met the criteria, and the data was analyzed to assess oxytocin's effects during and after childbirth.
  • Findings showed that oxytocin levels significantly increase during pregnancy and labor, with multiple pulses occurring as labor progresses, indicating complex regulation of uterine contractions and suggesting a role for oxytocin in both physical and psychological processes during birth.
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Background: Health care outcomes used in service evaluation and research tend to measure morbidity and mortality. This is the case even in maternity care, where most women and babies are healthy. Salutogenesis theory recognises that health is a continuum, with explicit inclusion of well-being as well as illness and pathology.

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