OBJECTIVE: Hypertensive disorders during pregnancy remain a major health burden. Normal pregnancy is associated with systemic cardiovascular adaptation. The augmentation index and pulse wave velocity measures may serve as surrogate markers of cardiovascular pathology, including pre-eclampsia. We evaluated these parameters during and after normotensive and pre-eclamptic pregnancies. DESIGN: Longitudinal cohort trial involving a case-control analysis of healthy women and women with pre-eclampsia. SETTING: University hospital. POPULATION: Fifty-three healthy pregnant women between 11(+6) and 13(+6) gestational weeks, as well as 21 patients with pre-eclampsia. METHODS: The augmentation index and pulse wave velocity were measured seven times during pregnancy and postpartum. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Changes in augmentation index and pulse wave velocity during and after healthy pregnancies were measured. The influence of early-onset and late-onset pre-eclampsia on these measurements both during and after pregnancy was evaluated. RESULTS: The normotensive pregnancies exhibited a significant decrease in the augmentation index from the first trimester to the end of the second trimester; however, the normotensive pregnancies showed an increase in the augmentation index during the third trimester as term approached. The patients with early-onset and late-onset pre-eclampsia displayed a significantly elevated augmentation index during pregnancy. The postpartum augmentation index and pulse wave velocity were significantly elevated in the early-onset pre-eclampsia group. CONCLUSION: After pregnancy, early-onset and late-onset pre-eclamptic patients exhibit differences in vascular function. This result indicates the presence of a higher cardiovascular risk in patients after early-onset pre-eclampsia.
OBJECTIVE:Hypertensive disorders during pregnancy remain a major health burden. Normal pregnancy is associated with systemic cardiovascular adaptation. The augmentation index and pulse wave velocity measures may serve as surrogate markers of cardiovascular pathology, including pre-eclampsia. We evaluated these parameters during and after normotensive and pre-eclamptic pregnancies. DESIGN: Longitudinal cohort trial involving a case-control analysis of healthy women and women with pre-eclampsia. SETTING: University hospital. POPULATION: Fifty-three healthy pregnant women between 11(+6) and 13(+6) gestational weeks, as well as 21 patients with pre-eclampsia. METHODS: The augmentation index and pulse wave velocity were measured seven times during pregnancy and postpartum. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Changes in augmentation index and pulse wave velocity during and after healthy pregnancies were measured. The influence of early-onset and late-onset pre-eclampsia on these measurements both during and after pregnancy was evaluated. RESULTS: The normotensive pregnancies exhibited a significant decrease in the augmentation index from the first trimester to the end of the second trimester; however, the normotensive pregnancies showed an increase in the augmentation index during the third trimester as term approached. The patients with early-onset and late-onset pre-eclampsia displayed a significantly elevated augmentation index during pregnancy. The postpartum augmentation index and pulse wave velocity were significantly elevated in the early-onset pre-eclampsia group. CONCLUSION: After pregnancy, early-onset and late-onset pre-eclamptic patients exhibit differences in vascular function. This result indicates the presence of a higher cardiovascular risk in patients after early-onset pre-eclampsia.
Authors: Fernanda Regina Giachini; Carlos Galaviz-Hernandez; Alicia E Damiano; Marta Viana; Angela Cadavid; Patricia Asturizaga; Enrique Teran; Sonia Clapes; Martin Alcala; Julio Bueno; María Calderón-Domínguez; María P Ramos; Victor Vitorino Lima; Martha Sosa-Macias; Nora Martinez; James M Roberts; Carlos Escudero Journal: Curr Hypertens Rep Date: 2017-10-06 Impact factor: 5.369
Authors: Deborah B Ehrenthal; Neal D Goldstein; Pan Wu; Stephanie Rogers; Raymond R Townsend; David G Edwards Journal: J Clin Hypertens (Greenwich) Date: 2014-08-13 Impact factor: 3.738