oxytocin
(noun)
a hormone that stimulates contractions during labor, and then the production of milk
Examples of oxytocin in the following topics:
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Labor and Birth
- Toward the end of the third trimester, estrogen causes receptors on the uterine wall to develop and bind the hormone oxytocin.
- The oxytocin causes the smooth muscle in the uterine wall to contract.
- A positive feedback relay occurs between the uterus, hypothalamus, and the posterior pituitary to assure an adequate supply of oxytocin.
- If labor should stop before stage two is reached, synthetic oxytocin, known as Pitocin, can be administered to restart and maintain labor.
- Oxytocin is also released, promoting the release of the milk.
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Hormonal Regulation of the Reproductive System
- The posterior pituitary releases the hormone oxytocin, which stimulates uterine contractions during childbirth.
- The uterine smooth muscles are not very sensitive to oxytocin until late in pregnancy, when the number of oxytocin receptors in the uterus peaks.
- Stretching of tissues in the uterus and cervix stimulates oxytocin release during childbirth.
- Oxytocin also stimulates the contraction of myoepithelial cells around the milk-producing mammary glands.
- Oxytocin release is stimulated by the suckling of an infant, which triggers the synthesis of oxytocin in the hypothalamus and its release into circulation at the posterior pituitary.
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Lipid-Derived, Amino Acid-Derived, and Peptide Hormones
- The peptide hormones include molecules that are short polypeptide chains, such as antidiuretic hormone and oxytocin produced in the brain and released into the blood in the posterior pituitary gland.
- The structures of peptide hormones (a) oxytocin, (b) growth hormone, and (c) follicle-stimulating hormone are shown.
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Control of Homeostasis
- The hormone oxytocin, made by the endocrine system, stimulates the contraction of the uterus.
- Instead of lowering the oxytocin and causing the pain to subside, more oxytocin is produced until the contractions are powerful enough to produce childbirth .
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Hypothalamic-Pituitary Axis
- The antidiuretic hormone (ADH) (or vasopressin) and oxytocin are produced by neurons in the hypothalamus and transported within these axons along the infundibulum to the posterior pituitary.
- Oxytocin, known as the bonding hormone, has roles in various behaviors, including orgasm, social recognition, pair bonding, anxiety, and maternal behaviors.