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Biology of Reproduction, Vol 10, 54-61, Copyright © 1974 by Society for the Study of Reproduction
1 Department of Anatomy, Laboratory of Human Reproduction and Reproductive Biology,
Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115 When non-pregnant rabbits were linked to 20- or 29-day pregnant rabbits by a cross-circulation technique, the frequency of intra-uterine pressure cycles in the former fell from
pre-treatment values of around 8 cycles/10 min to 0.4 cycles/10 min at the end of cross-circulation (P < 0.001). Maximum amplitude fell less abruptly from 29 mm Hg to 19 mm
Hg (P < 0.05). Following the cross-circulation which lasted 1 h, activity recovered so
that in approximately 2 h maximum amplitude had returned to pretreatment levels and
frequency to 50% of pretreatment levels. Similar experiments using progesterone-treated
non-pregnant animals in the place of the pregnant does had no effect on the uterine
activity of their partners during 1 h of cross-circulation despite the fact that the blood
progesterone level of the treated animals was 93 ng/ml. Intravenous injections of large
doses of progesterone were also ineffective within a similar time period. Since the latency
of the progesterone effect on the myometrium is 8-12 h, the existence of a second myometrial
inhibitory substance which acts in conjunction with progesterone in maintaining pregnancy
is postulated.
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