| Literature DB >> 24707187 |
David M Haas1, Tara Benjamin1, Renata Sawyer1, Sara K Quinney1.
Abstract
Administration of short-term tocolytic agents can prolong pregnancy for women in preterm labor. Prolonging pregnancy has many benefits because it allows for other proven interventions, such as antenatal corticosteroid administration, to be accomplished. This review provides an overview of currently utilized tocolytic agents and the evidence demonstrating their efficacy for prolonging pregnancy by at least 48 hours. General pharmacological principles for the clinician regarding drugs in pregnancy are also briefly discussed. In general, while the choice of the best first-line short-term tocolytic drug is not clear, it is evident that use of these agents has a clear place in current obstetric therapeutics.Entities:
Keywords: preterm delivery; short-term; tocolytics
Year: 2014 PMID: 24707187 PMCID: PMC3971910 DOI: 10.2147/IJWH.S44048
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Womens Health ISSN: 1179-1411
Commonly used tocolytic drug classes
| Drug class | Individual drugs in the class commonly used or studied | Major side effects | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| Betamimetics | Ritodrine, terbutaline, hexoprenaline, salbutamol | Cardiac arrhythmias (tachycardia), hypotension, hyperglycemia, pulmonary edema | Long-term use recently given an FDA “black box” warning |
| Calcium channel blockers | Nifedipine, nicardipine | Maternal hypotension, dizziness | Initial loading dose common |
| Magnesium sulfate | Magnesium sulfate | Flushing, respiratory suppression, cardiac arrest | Currently utilized for neuroprotection protocols |
| Oxytocin receptor blockers | Atosiban, barusiban | Gastrointestinal upset | Not utilized in the USA |
| Prostaglandin inhibitors | Indomethacin, sulindac, celecoxib | Maternal gastrointestinal disturbance, oligohydramnios, premature constriction of the ductus | Concern about ductal constriction limits use generally to <32 weeks’ gestation |
| Nitrates and others | Nitroglycerin, nitric oxide | Headache, flushing, maternal hypotension, tachycardia | Currently limited to research trials |
Abbreviation: FDA, US Food and Drug Administration.