| Literature DB >> 29368194 |
Eirin B Haug1, Julie Horn2,3, Amanda Rose Markovitz4,5, Abigail Fraser6, Corrie Macdonald-Wallis6, Kate Tilling6, Pål Richard Romundstad2, Janet Wilson Rich-Edwards4,5, Bjørn Olav Åsvold2,7.
Abstract
The drop in blood pressure during pregnancy may persist postpartum, but the impact of pregnancy on blood pressure across the life course is not known. In this study we examined blood pressure trajectories for women in the years preceding and following pregnancy and compared life course trajectories of blood pressure for parous and nulliparous women. We linked information on all women who participated in the population-based, longitudinal HUNT Study, Norway with pregnancy information from the Medical Birth Registry of Norway. A total of 23,438 women were included with up to 3 blood pressure measurements per woman. Blood pressure trajectories were compared using a mixed effects linear spline model. Before first pregnancy, women who later gave birth had similar mean blood pressure to women who never gave birth. Women who delivered experienced a drop after their first birth of - 3.32 mmHg (95% CI, - 3.93, - 2.71) and - 1.98 mmHg (95% CI, - 2.43, - 1.53) in systolic and diastolic blood pressure, respectively. Subsequent pregnancies were associated with smaller reductions. These pregnancy-related reductions in blood pressure led to persistent differences in mean blood pressure, and at age 50, parous women still had lower systolic (- 1.93 mmHg; 95% CI, - 3.33, - 0.53) and diastolic (- 1.36 mmHg; 95% CI, - 2.26, - 0.46) blood pressure compared to nulliparous women. The findings suggest that the first pregnancy and, to a lesser extent, successive pregnancies are associated with lasting and clinically relevant reductions in systolic and diastolic blood pressure.Entities:
Keywords: Blood pressure; Epidemiology; Life course; Parity; Pregnancy
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29368194 PMCID: PMC6061132 DOI: 10.1007/s10654-018-0358-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Epidemiol ISSN: 0393-2990 Impact factor: 8.082
Fig. 1Flow chart of the study population
Descriptive characteristics of the study population
| Characteristics | Nulliparous (n = 1925) | Parous (n = 21,513) |
|---|---|---|
| Birthyear, median (IQR) | 1958 (1949–1966) | 1958 (1951–1965) |
| Ever smoked daily, n (%) | ||
| No | 924 (48) | 8500 (40) |
| Yes | 1001 (52) | 13,013 (60) |
| Education, n (%) | ||
| Lower secondary | 437 (23) | 3823 (18) |
| Upper secondary | 814 (42) | 10,061 (47) |
| Tertiary | 674 (35) | 7629 (35) |
| Ever used oral contraceptives, n (%)* | ||
| No | 693 (36) | 4380 (20) |
| Yes | 708 (37) | 13,077 (61) |
| Missing | 524 (27) | 4056 (19) |
| Ever used blood pressure medication, n (%) | ||
| No | 1721 (89) | 19,075 (89) |
| Yes | 204 (11) | 2434 (11) |
| Missing | 0 (0) | 4 (0) |
| Births, n (%) | ||
| 1 | N/A | 2577 (12) |
| 2 | N/A | 9778 (46) |
| 3 or more | N/A | 9158 (42) |
| Age at 1st birth, median (IQR) | N/A | 23 (20–26) |
| Year of 1st birth, median (IQR) | N/A | 1981 (1973–1990) |
| Breastfeeding length of first child, n (%)* | ||
| No breastfeeding | N/A | 994 (5) |
| < 3 months | N/A | 2864 (13) |
| 3–6 months | N/A | 5437 (25) |
| > 6 months | N/A | 7401 (34) |
| Missing | N/A | 4817 (22) |
| No. of HUNT exams, n (%) | ||
| 1 | 898 (47) | 7307 (34) |
| 2 | 562 (29) | 7022 (33) |
| 3 | 465 (24) | 7184 (33) |
|
| ||
| Number of observations, n (%) | 3417 (7) | 42,903 (93) |
| BMI at HUNT exam, kg/m2 | ||
| < 25 | 1792 (52) | 24,022 (56) |
| 25–29.9 | 953 (28) | 12,935 (30) |
| ≥ 30 | 648 (19) | 5881 (14) |
| Missing | 24 (1) | 65 (0.2) |
| Current use of oral contraceptives, n (%)* | ||
| No | 1684 (49) | 22,686 (53) |
| Yes | 234 (7) | 2797 (7) |
| Missing | 1499 (44) | 17,420 (41) |
| Current use of blood pressure medication, n (%) | ||
| No | 3192 (93) | 40,461 (94) |
| Yes | 219 (6) | 2338 (6) |
| Missing | 6 (0.2) | 104 (0.2) |
*Queried at HUNT2 and HUNT3
Fig. 2Mean systolic and diastolic blood pressure life course trajectories for nulliparous and parous women with one or more births (a and b), two or more births (c and d) and three or more births (e and f). Trajectories are drawn for women with covariates fixed at their means and with gaps in the graph of parous women corresponding to pregnancy and 3-month postpartum periods with the 1st birth at age 23, 2nd at 27 and 3rd at 30 years. Estimates are adjusted for age, HUNT survey, education and ever daily smoking
Estimated mean change in systolic and diastolic blood pressure from pre- to post-pregnancy among parous women
| Pregnancy onea | Pregnancy twob | Pregnancy threec | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Blood pressure change | 95% CI | Blood pressure change | 95% CI | Blood pressure change | 95% CI | ||||
| Systolic (mmHg) | |||||||||
| Model 1d | − 3.42 | [− 3.98, − 2.85] | < 0.001 | − 0.68 | [− 1.28, − 0.07] | 0.028 | − 0.22 | [0.97, 0.53] | 0.563 |
| Model 2e | − 3.32 | [− 3.93, − 2.71] | < 0.001 | − 0.68 | [− 1.30, − 0.06] | 0.031 | − 0.24 | [− 1.00, 0.52] | 0.537 |
| Diastolic (mmHg) | |||||||||
| Model 1d | − 2.00 | [− 2.42, − 1.59] | < 0.001 | − 0.33 | [− 0.77, 0.11] | 0.138 | − 0.62 | [− 1.15, − 0.10] | 0.021 |
| Model 2e | − 1.98 | [− 2.43, − 1.53] | < 0.001 | − 0.31 | [− 0.75, 0.14] | 0.182 | − 0.59 | [− 1.13, − 0.06] | 0.031 |
aEstimates are obtained from the trajectory models depicted in Fig. 2a and b where nulliparous women and all women with one or more children are included (n = 23,168)
bEstimates are obtained from the trajectory models depicted in Fig. 2c and d where nulliparous women and all women with two or more children are included (n = 20,861)
cEstimates are obtained from the trajectory models depicted in Fig. 2e and f where nulliparous women and all women with three or more children are included (n = 11,083)
dEstimates are adjusted for age and HUNT survey
eEstimates are adjusted for age, HUNT survey, education and ever daily smoking