RATE OF FALL IN PLASMA PROGESTERONE AND TIME TO ABORTION FOLLOWING INTRA‐AMNIOTIC INJECTION OF PROSTAGLANDIN F WITH OR WITHOUT UREA, IN THE SECOND TRIMESTER OF HUMAN PREGNANCY

Abstract
Summary: Progesterone concentrations have been determined in a total of 175 peripheral plasma samples obtained serially from 20 women undergoing mid‐trimester abortion. In ten patients abortion was induced by intra‐amniotic administration of 50 mg. of prostaglandin F (PGF) alone; in ten others it was induced with 50 mg. of intra‐amniotic PGF with 80 g. of urea. Mean instillation‐abortion intervals were 29.0 hours in the group receiving PGF alone and 12.1 hours in the groups receiving PGF and urea. In eight of the patients treated with PGF and urea, and in four of those treated with PGF alone, there were significant decreases in progesterone level (determined by calculation of correlation coefficients) during the instillation‐abortion interval. When plotted against instillation‐abortion times, calculated rates of decrease in peripheral plasma progesterone levels showed a statistically significant regression (p<0.05). This indicates that progesterone levels drop most rapidly in patients with shorter instillation‐abortion times. There was no relationship between initial progesterone levels and instillation‐abortion times.

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