Abstract

The purpose of this study was to examine variations in endogenous oxytocin levels in pregnancy and postpartum state. We also explored the associations between delivery variables and oxytocin levels. A final sample of 272 mothers in their first trimester of pregnancy was included for the study. Blood samples were drawn during the first trimester and third trimester of pregnancy and at 8 weeks postpartum. Socio-demographic data were collected at each time point and medical files were consulted for delivery details. In most women, levels of circulating oxytocin increased from the first to third trimester of pregnancy followed by a decrease in the postpartum period. Oxytocin levels varied considerably between individuals, ranging from 50 pg/mL to over 2000 pg/mL. Parity was the main predictor of oxytocin levels in the third trimester of pregnancy and of oxytocin level changes from the first to the third trimester of pregnancy. Oxytocin levels in the third trimester of pregnancy predicted a self-reported negative labor experience and increased the chances of having an epidural. Intrapartum exogenous oxytocin was positively associated with levels of oxytocin during the postpartum period. Our exploratory results suggest that circulating oxytocin levels during the third trimester of pregnancy may predict the type of labor a woman will experience. More importantly, the quantity of intrapartum exogenous oxytocin administered during labor predicted plasma oxytocin levels 2 months postpartum, suggesting a possible long-term effect of this routine intervention, the consequences of which are largely unknown.

Highlights

  • Pregnancy is a unique state that is accompanied by numerous biological and psychological changes

  • We explored the associations between delivery variables and oxytocin levels

  • Our exploratory results suggest that circulating oxytocin levels during the third trimester of pregnancy may predict the type of labor a woman will experience

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Summary

Introduction

Pregnancy is a unique state that is accompanied by numerous biological and psychological changes. While there are known changes in the levels of hormones such as progesterone and estrogen in pregnant women [1], there is a paucity of information about variations in levels of oxytocin, crucial to parturition and lactation. Oxytocin is a neuropeptide that is synthesized centrally in the paraventricular and supraoptic nuclei of the hypothalamus and is released into the bloodstream via the posterior pituitary during labor, lactation, uterine dilatation, stress, after sexual stimulation, and possibly during different types of social interactions [2,3,4,5]. In non-human primates, no reliable pattern of variation of oxytocin during pregnancy or the postpartum period has been observed, but a fourfold increase on the day of delivery has been reported [7]. A study in cows showed a similar peak of plasma oxytocin levels on the day of delivery but very stable and low levels of circulating oxytocin during the late pregnancy period [8]

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