## Correct Answer: A. 24 hours after delivery Prolactin levels peak dramatically in the immediate postpartum period, reaching their highest physiological concentrations within 24 hours after delivery. This surge is driven by the removal of placental estrogen, which normally suppresses prolactin secretion during pregnancy. The placenta produces large amounts of estrogen that exert tonic inhibition on lactotroph cells via dopamine-mediated suppression of TRH. Once the placenta is expelled, this inhibition is lifted, allowing prolactin to rise sharply. Additionally, suckling stimulation during the first 24 hours post-delivery triggers the Ferguson reflex and further elevates prolactin through removal of dopaminergic inhibition at the hypothalamic level. In lactating mothers, prolactin remains elevated but at lower levels than the immediate postpartum peak. This physiological understanding is critical for Indian obstetric practice, where lactation support and understanding postpartum hormonal changes are essential for maternal and neonatal health. The postpartum prolactin surge is the single highest physiological prolactin level a woman experiences in her lifetime. ## Why the other options are wrong **B. 24 hours after ovulation** — This is wrong because prolactin levels do not show a characteristic peak 24 hours post-ovulation. While prolactin may show minor cyclical variations during the menstrual cycle (slightly elevated in the luteal phase due to progesterone), these fluctuations are minimal compared to the dramatic postpartum surge. NBE may trap students who confuse prolactin's role in reproduction with its cyclical changes during ovulation. **C. After running four 1 hours** — This is wrong because physical exercise causes only a transient, modest elevation in prolactin (stress-induced release via TRH), not the sustained peak seen postpartum. The prolactin rise with exercise is temporary and resolves within minutes to hours, whereas postpartum prolactin elevation persists for weeks. This is a distractor option designed to confuse students about stress-induced hormonal responses. **D. REM sleep** — This is wrong because while prolactin does show sleep-related elevation (higher during sleep, especially REM), the absolute levels during sleep are far lower than the postpartum surge. Sleep-induced prolactin elevation is a minor physiological variation, not a peak state. NBE uses this to test whether students distinguish between minor cyclical variations and the dramatic postpartum peak. ## High-Yield Facts - **Postpartum prolactin peak** occurs within 24 hours of delivery and represents the highest physiological prolactin level in a woman's lifetime. - **Placental estrogen** suppresses prolactin during pregnancy via dopamine-mediated inhibition; removal of placenta → immediate prolactin surge. - **Suckling stimulus** maintains elevated prolactin in lactating mothers through removal of dopaminergic inhibition at the hypothalamic level. - **Prolactin and dopamine** have an inverse relationship: dopamine is the primary prolactin-inhibiting factor (PIF) from the hypothalamus. - **Sleep-related prolactin elevation** and stress-induced prolactin rise are minor variations compared to the postpartum surge. ## Mnemonics **POST-DELIVERY PROLACTIN PEAK** **P**lacenta out → **P**rolactin up. Estrogen gone → Dopamine inhibition gone → Lactotrophs fire freely. Use when remembering why postpartum prolactin is highest. **PIF = Dopamine (Prolactin-Inhibiting Factor)** Dopamine from hypothalamus tonically suppresses prolactin. Remove dopamine (or placental estrogen's effect) → prolactin rises. Recall: Dopamine = brake on prolactin; no placenta = no brake. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs prolactin with ovulation and sleep to trap students who confuse minor cyclical hormonal variations with the dramatic postpartum surge. The question tests whether students know the *magnitude* of prolactin change, not just that prolactin fluctuates. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian obstetric practice, understanding the postpartum prolactin surge is essential for counseling mothers on lactation initiation and managing postpartum complications. Mothers who deliver in government hospitals (ASHA/ANM-assisted deliveries) benefit from early skin-to-skin contact and frequent suckling within the first 24 hours to maximize this natural prolactin peak and establish exclusive breastfeeding—a cornerstone of India's NRHM lactation guidelines. _Reference: Guyton & Hall Physiology Ch. 81 (Lactation); Harrison Ch. 375 (Pituitary Disorders); KD Tripathi Pharmacology Ch. 31 (Endocrine Pharmacology)_
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