Literature DB >> 3763270

Metoclopramide effect on faltering milk production by mothers of premature infants.

R A Ehrenkranz, B A Ackerman.   

Abstract

Metoclopramide treatment has been shown to augment milk production by stimulating prolactin secretion in women in whom lactational insufficiency develops after a full-term pregnancy. The effect of metoclopramide therapy in 23 women who were delivered of premature infants (birth weight 1,314 +/- 115 g, gestational age 30.4 +/- 0.7 weeks) and who were having difficulty maintaining milk production with milk expression was evaluated. Each woman had noted a gradual decrease in the total daily volume of expressed milk during the first several weeks of lactation. Maternal metoclopramide therapy was started at a mean of 32.0 +/- 3.7 days postpartum, after a review of diet and milk expression technique and an increase in the number of expressions per day failed to increase milk production. Daily milk production increased significantly from 93.3 +/- 18.0 mL/d to 197.4 +/- 32.3 mL/d between the first and seventh day of therapy. This increase was associated with significantly increased basal serum prolactin levels, from 18.1 +/- 3.3 ng/mL to 121.8 +/- 21.5 ng/mL. Although milk expression resulted in a variable increase in serum prolactin levels prior to metoclopramide treatment, milk expression did not produce any additional prolactin response in the treated women, with mean basal levels of 157.8 +/- 15.4 ng/mL v mean peak levels of 144.5 +/- 12.2 ng/mL. No major side effects were reported by the women, and no untoward effects were noted in the infants fed milk expressed while their mothers were being treated with metoclopramide.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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Year:  1986        PMID: 3763270

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pediatrics        ISSN: 0031-4005            Impact factor:   7.124


  15 in total

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5.  Recombinant human prolactin for the treatment of lactation insufficiency.

Authors:  Camille E Powe; Maureen Allen; Karen M Puopolo; Anne Merewood; Susan Worden; Lise C Johnson; Amy Fleischman; Corrine K Welt
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Review 7.  Breastfeeding and migraine drugs.

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8.  Dose-effect study of domperidone as a galactagogue in preterm mothers with insufficient milk supply, and its transfer into milk.

Authors:  Elise W-X Wan; Kaye Davey; Madhu Page-Sharp; Peter E Hartmann; Karen Simmer; Kenneth F Ilett
Journal:  Br J Clin Pharmacol       Date:  2008-04-21       Impact factor: 4.335

9.  Study protocol: a double blind placebo controlled trial examining the effect of domperidone on the composition of breast milk [NCT00308334].

Authors:  Marsha L Campbell-Yeo; Alexander C Allen; K S Joseph; Joyce M Ledwidge; Victoria M Allen; Kent C Dooley
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