oxytocin and Monkey-Diseases

oxytocin has been researched along with Monkey-Diseases* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for oxytocin and Monkey-Diseases

ArticleYear
Placental retention in a golden lion tamarin (Leontopithecus rosalia).
    Journal of zoo and wildlife medicine : official publication of the American Association of Zoo Veterinarians, 2005, Volume: 36, Issue:4

    A 4-yr-old female golden lion tamarin (Leontopithecus rosalia) had placental retention after delivery of a stillborn fetus. Conservative therapy with oxytocin and dinoprost tromethamine did not result in placental expulsion and ovariohysterectomy was performed. Placental retention is a rare condition in humans and has not been well documented in non-human primates.

    Topics: Animals; Animals, Zoo; Dinoprost; Female; Leontopithecus; Monkey Diseases; Oxytocics; Oxytocin; Placenta, Retained; Pregnancy; Treatment Outcome

2005
Production of premature delivery in pregnant rhesus monkeys by androstenedione infusion.
    Nature medicine, 1996, Volume: 2, Issue:4

    The endocrine mechanism involved in term and preterm delivery in primates, including pregnant women, are poorly understood. In the term monkey, fetal plasma androgen concentration rises to two hundred times the maternal concentration which remains unchanged. Placental conversion of androgen to estrogen results in increased maternal plasma estrogen concentration at term in both pregnant nonhuman primates and women. In the present study, continuous infusion of androstenedione to 0.8 gestation monkeys resulted in the premature occurrence of labor-type myometrial activity and increases in maternal plasma estrogen, oxytocin and amnion fibronectin concentrations similar to those measured at normal-term labor. Androstenedione induction of these normal-term biochemical and endocrine changes accompanied by fetal membrane rupture, cervical dilatation and live delivery provides a rich opportunity to study the molecular and physiological mechanisms of both term and preterm labor in primates.

    Topics: Androstenedione; Animals; Estrogens; Female; Fibronectins; Humans; Infusions, Intravenous; Macaca mulatta; Monkey Diseases; Myometrium; Obstetric Labor, Premature; Oxytocin; Pregnancy; Uterine Contraction

1996