Literature DB >> 23190437

Mid-gestational maternal cardiovascular profile in preterm and term pre-eclampsia: a prospective study.

K Melchiorre1, G Sutherland, R Sharma, M Nanni, B Thilaganathan.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Pre-eclampsia (PE) is associated with maternal cardiac remodelling and biventricular diastolic dysfunction. Preterm PE alone can also be associated with severe left ventricular hypertrophy and biventricular systolic dysfunction. The aim of this study was to assess whether the maternal cardiovascular profile at mid-gestation in nulliparous normotensive women differs in women destined to develop preterm PE versus those who will develop PE at term.
DESIGN: Prospective study.
SETTING: Tertiary referral university centre. POPULATION: A total of 269 women, including 152 at increased risk of developing PE as determined by mid-gestational uterine artery Doppler assessment.
METHODS: Women underwent blood pressure profiling, echocardiography, cardiac tissue Doppler and strain rate analysis at 20-23 weeks of gestation. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Mid-gestational cardiovascular profile in women with normal pregnancy and those that subsequently developed preterm or term PE.
RESULTS: Pre-eclampsia subsequently developed in 46 women, including 18 with preterm PE. Women who subsequently developed PE, irrespective of gestation, had evidence of left ventricular concentric remodelling (33%) which was not found in the control women (P < 0.0001). Only women who developed preterm PE exhibited a high resistance-low volume haemodynamic state at mid-gestation. The latter group also had evidence of left ventricular diastolic or systolic dysfunction (33%) and segmental impaired myocardial relaxation (72%).
CONCLUSIONS: Asymptomatic cardiac diastolic dysfunction is evident at mid-gestation in women who subsequently develop preterm PE but not in those who develop term PE. These cardiac findings are useful in understanding the pathophysiology of PE and corroborate the concept that PE is not a single disorder, but a cluster of symptoms that have several different aetiologies.
© 2012 The Authors BJOG An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology © 2012 RCOG.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2012        PMID: 23190437     DOI: 10.1111/1471-0528.12068

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BJOG        ISSN: 1470-0328            Impact factor:   6.531


  26 in total

1.  Acute Cardiac Effects of Severe Pre-Eclampsia.

Authors:  Arthur Jason Vaught; Lara C Kovell; Linda M Szymanski; Susan A Mayer; Sara M Seifert; Dhananjay Vaidya; Jamie D Murphy; Cynthia Argani; Anna O'Kelly; Sarah York; Pamela Ouyang; Monica Mukherjee; Sammy Zakaria
Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2018-07-03       Impact factor: 24.094

2.  Serum and Urine Thioflavin-T-Enhanced Fluorescence in Severe Preeclampsia.

Authors:  Katherine R Millen; Catalin S Buhimschi; Guomao Zhao; Kara M Rood; Sammy Tabbah; Irina A Buhimschi
Journal:  Hypertension       Date:  2018-04-23       Impact factor: 10.190

Review 3.  Hypertension in pregnancy: Taking cues from pathophysiology for clinical practice.

Authors:  Ruxandra I Sava; Keith L March; Carl J Pepine
Journal:  Clin Cardiol       Date:  2018-02-27       Impact factor: 2.882

4.  Breaking a Mother's Heart: Circulating Antiangiogenic Factors and Hypertension During Pregnancy Correlate With Specific Cardiac Dysfunctions.

Authors:  Jeremy A Sandgren; Mark K Santillan; Justin L Grobe
Journal:  Hypertension       Date:  2016-04-25       Impact factor: 10.190

Review 5.  The Use of Echocardiography and Advanced Cardiac Ultrasonography During Pregnancy.

Authors:  Anna C O'Kelly; Garima Sharma; Arthur Jason Vaught; Sammy Zakaria
Journal:  Curr Treat Options Cardiovasc Med       Date:  2019-11-21

6.  Pregnancy-Associated Cardiac Hypertrophy in Corin-Deficient Mice: Observations in a Transgenic Model of Preeclampsia.

Authors:  Rachael C Baird; Shuo Li; Hao Wang; Sathyamangla V Naga Prasad; David Majdalany; Uma Perni; Qingyu Wu
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7.  Clinical practice guideline on pregnancy and renal disease.

Authors:  Kate Wiles; Lucy Chappell; Katherine Clark; Louise Elman; Matt Hall; Liz Lightstone; Germin Mohamed; Durba Mukherjee; Catherine Nelson-Piercy; Philip Webster; Rebecca Whybrow; Kate Bramham
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Review 8.  Updates in Diagnosis and Management of Preeclampsia in Women with CKD.

Authors:  Kate Wiles; Lucy C Chappell; Liz Lightstone; Kate Bramham
Journal:  Clin J Am Soc Nephrol       Date:  2020-04-02       Impact factor: 8.237

9.  Incidence of essential hypertension but not echocardiographic abnormalities at four years with a history of preeclampsia with severe features.

Authors:  Arthur Jason Vaught; Anum Minhas; Theresa Boyer; Alexia Debrosse; Garima Sharma; Dhananjay Vaidya; Pamela Ouyang; Sammy Zakaria; Monica Mukherjee
Journal:  Pregnancy Hypertens       Date:  2021-06-12       Impact factor: 2.899

10.  Long-Term Postpartum Cardiac Function and Its Association With Preeclampsia.

Authors:  Victoria A deMartelly; John Dreixler; Avery Tung; Ariel Mueller; Sarah Heimberger; Abid A Fazal; Heba Naseem; Roberto Lang; Eric Kruse; Megan Yamat; Joey P Granger; Bhavisha A Bakrania; Javier Rodriguez-Kovacs; Sarosh Rana; Sajid Shahul
Journal:  J Am Heart Assoc       Date:  2021-02-23       Impact factor: 5.501

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