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Apex Nursing

Reference — Maternal-Newborn

Tocolytic Medications Reference

Four agents, one shared purpose: roughly 48 hours of delay so corticosteroids, magnesium neuroprotection, and transfer can happen. Just as important is the list at the bottom — when stopping labor is the wrong move.

Educational use only. Agent selection, dosing, and hold parameters follow provider orders and facility protocols — this reference covers drug 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

DrugClassMonitoringNotes
NifedipineCalcium channel blockerMaternal BP and heart rate — hypotension is the main concern; avoid combining with IV magnesium per provider judgmentOral dosing; commonly first-line in many protocols
IndomethacinNSAID (prostaglandin synthesis inhibitor)Amniotic fluid (oligohydramnios) and fetal ductus arteriosus with longer useGenerally limited to <32 weeks and ≤48-hour courses for exactly those fetal reasons
Magnesium sulfateSmooth-muscle relaxant (mechanism debated)DTRs, respiratory rate, urine output — the standard magnesium trio; calcium gluconate at the bedsideWhere used, often overlaps its neuroprotection role before ~32 weeks
TerbutalineBeta-2 agonistMaternal heart rate (tachycardia, palpitations), glucose, potassium; fetal tachycardiaShort-term/acute use only — boxed warning against prolonged use; hold per protocol for maternal HR thresholds

When Tocolysis Is Contraindicated

Intrauterine infection (chorioamnionitis)

Significant abruption or hemorrhage

Severe preeclampsia / eclampsia

Fetal demise or lethal anomaly

Non-reassuring fetal status

Advanced labor (membrane rupture with advanced dilation shifts the goal to safe delivery)

The shared logic: when the intrauterine environment is the threat — infection, bleeding, a failing placenta — delaying delivery protects nothing.

What the 48 Hours Buys

Betamethasone — two IM doses 24 hours apart; lung-maturity benefit builds over 24–48 hours

Magnesium neuroprotection before ~32 weeks

GBS prophylaxis addressed before delivery

Maternal transfer to a facility with the right NICU level — transporting the fetus in utero beats any ambulance isolette

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 →