- Australian scientists have determined a trigger for labour at 40 weeks
- They have a found protein is released to allows the uterus to contract
- Finding could lead to the development of new drugs to induce labour
- The drugs could be used by overweight or obese women and also to prevent premature births
Australian
scientists appear to have solved one of the great mysteries of human
biology - exactly what triggers labour after about 40 weeks of
pregnancy.
They cannot explain how the timing works or predict a child's birthday with greater accuracy.
But
they know that, when it's time, the body produces a protein, which
releases a safety switch that allows the uterus to contract in a way
that any stretched muscle should.
This could
lead to new drugs to induce labour in overweight or obese women, as
well as a way to prevent pre-term births, says Professor Shaun Brennecke
from the University of Melbourne and Royal Women's Hospital.
'For decades, we have been looking at what might start human labour. This is the first clear-cut identification of that.
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