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Title: Maternal and fetal plasma concentrations of ritodrine. Author: Gross TL, Kuhnert BR, Kuhnert PM, Rosen MG, Kazzi NJ. Journal: Obstet Gynecol; 1985 Jun; 65(6):793-7. PubMed ID: 4000569. Abstract: Previous studies using other beta-adrenergic drugs for tocolysis suggest that if treatment fails and the patient delivers shortly after the therapy is discontinued, there is a direct correlation between neonatal drug concentration and major neonatal complications. In the present study, the disposition of ritodrine was studied in 28 maternal-infant pairs in whom intravenous ritodrine had been administered for clinical indications. The fetal to maternal ratio of ritodrine was 1.17 +/- 0.48. The concentration of ritodrine in both maternal and umbilical vein was found to vary inversely with the length of time the drug was discontinued before delivery. A stepwise multilinear regression revealed that the maternal ritodrine dose in the 24 hours before delivery and the drug discontinuance to delivery interval were both independently related to umbilical vein ritodrine concentrations. When combined, the two variables explained 52% of the variance in umbilical vein ritodrine levels. The frequency of respiratory distress syndrome was increased in the neonates in whom umbilical vein ritodrine was greater than 10 ng/mL, compared with the groups with umbilical vein levels ranging from 3.0 to 10.0 ng/mL. However, neonates with the highest ritodrine concentration were also of lower gestational age (29.4 versus 33.5 weeks, P less than .05) and thus, had greater inherent risk of prematurity-related complications.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]