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Apex Nursing

Reference — Maternal-Newborn

Uterotonic Medications Reference

The atony drugs in working order — and the two contraindication pairings every nurse and every exam expects you to know cold: methylergonovine–hypertension and carboprost–asthma.

Educational use only. Doses, sequences, and repeat intervals follow your hemorrhage protocol and provider orders — this reference covers agent characteristics for learning. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Agents at a Glance

DrugRouteKey ContraindicationSide EffectsNursing Notes
Oxytocin (Pitocin)IV infusion (diluted) or IMNone absolute in hemorrhage — first-lineWater intoxication/hyponatremia with prolonged high-dose infusions; hypotension with rapid IV push (avoid undiluted push)Routine active-management dose after every birth; rate titrated to tone
Methylergonovine (Methergine)IM (typical)Hypertension / preeclampsiaHypertension, vasoconstriction, nauseaCheck the blood pressure before giving — the classic exam pairing
Carboprost (Hemabate)IM, repeatable per protocolAsthmaBronchospasm, significant diarrhea, nausea, feverProstaglandin F2α — the asthma pairing; premedicate for GI effects per order
Misoprostol (Cytotec)Rectal, sublingual, or oral per protocolNo major hemorrhage-setting contraindicationFever, shivering, GI upsetProstaglandin E1 — useful when IV access or refrigeration is limited
Tranexamic acid (TXA)IVActive thromboembolic disease (caution)Generally well tolerated; thrombosis concernAntifibrinolytic, not a uterotonic — given early (commonly within 3 hours of onset) alongside the agents above

Sequence Logic

Fundal massage happens with, not instead of, medications. Oxytocin runs first and continuously; the second-line choice between methylergonovine and carboprost is usually decided by the patient’s history — hypertensive patients get carboprost, asthmatic patients get methylergonovine, and patients with both push the team to misoprostol and escalation.

While drugs cycle, the rest of the response advances in parallel: second IV, labs and crossmatch, quantified loss, and the provider’s next rung (bimanual compression, balloon tamponade, OR).

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 20, 2026

This page is written to align with American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) · AWHONN · American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) — newborn. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →