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Hypertension in Pregnancy

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Presentation on theme: "Hypertension in Pregnancy"— Presentation transcript:

1 Hypertension in Pregnancy
Tony Nicoll Consultant Obstetrician Ninewells Hospital

2 Outline Objectives Physiology Classification Pre-eclampsia
Pathogenesis Management Eclampsia Conclusions

3 Objectives Understand the processes involved in antenatal care, surveillance in pregnancy, and the roles of the professionals involved (Outcomes 1-11) Demonstrate a knowledge of the common problems encountered in obstetric practice (Outcomes 3,4,5,8)

4 Hypertension in Pregnancy
Hypertension affects 10-15% of all pregnancies Mild pre-eclampsia affects 10% of primigravid women Severe pre-eclampsia affects 1% of primigravid women Eclampsia affects 1/2000 pregnancies Death from eclampsia = 2% Pre-eclampsia is the commonest cause of iatrogenic prematurity Up to 25% of antenatal admissions are due to hypertension

5 Blood Pressure in Pregnancy
Blood pressure (BP) proportional to systemic vascular resistance and cardiac output Pregnancy  Vasodilatation BP falls in early pregnancy Nadir reached at weeks Steady rise until Term BP falls after delivery but subsequently rises and peaks at day 3-4 P/N

6 Hypertension DBP >110 mmHg
≥140/90 mmHg on 2 occasions DBP >110 mmHg ACOG - >30/15 mmHg compared to booking BP

7 Hypertension in Pregnancy
Pre-existing hypertension Pregnancy Induced Hypertension (PIH) Pre-eclampsia

8 Pre-existing Hypertension
Diagnosis prior to pregnancy Likely if hypertension in early pregnancy (PET / PIH diseases of second half of pregnancy) May be retrospective diagnosis if BP has not returned to normal within 3 months of delivery Consider secondary causes - renal / cardiac, Cushing’s, Conn’s, Phaeochromocytoma Risks include PET (X2), IUGR and abruption

9 PIH Second half of pregnancy Resolves within 6/52 of delivery
No proteinuria or other features of pre-eclampsia Better outcomes than pre-eclampsia 15% progression to pre-eclampsia - depends on gestation Rate of recurrence is high

10 Pre-eclampsia

11 Pre-eclampsia Hypertension Proteinuria (≥0.3g/l or ≥0.3g/24h) Oedema
Absence does not exclude the diagnosis

12 Pre-eclampsia A pregnancy-specific multi-system disorder with unpredictable, variable and widespread manifestations May be asymptomatic at time of first presentation Diffuse vascular endothelial dysfunction widespread circulatory disturbance Renal / Hepatic / Cardiovascular / Haematology / CNS / Placenta

13 Pathogenesis Genetic predisposition
Stage 1 - abnormal placental perfusion Stage 2 - maternal syndrome

14 Pathogenesis Abnormal placentation and trophoblast invasion  failure of normal vascular remodelling Spiral arteries fail to adapt to become high capacitance, low resistance vessels Placental ischaemia  widespread endothelial damage and dysfunction Mechanism unclear (??oxidative stress / PGI2 : TXA2 imbalance / NO) Endothelial Activation   Capillary Permeability  Expression of CAM  Prothrombotic Factors  Platelet aggregration Vasoconstriction

15 Non- Pregnant Pre-eclampsia Normal Placentation

16 A Multi-system Disorder
CNS Renal Hepatic Haematological Pulmonary Cardiovascular Placental

17 CNS Disease Eclampsia Hypertensive encephalopathy
Intracranial haemorrhage Cerebral Oedema Cortical Blindness Cranial Nerve Palsy

18 Renal disease  GFR Proteinuria
 serum uric acid (also placental ischaemia)  creatinine / potassium / urea Oliguria /anuria Acute renal failure acute tubular necrosis renal cortical necrosis

19 Liver Disease Epigastric/ RUQ pain Abnormal liver enzymes
Hepatic capsule rupture HELLP Syndrome Haemolysis, Elevated Liver Enzymes, Low Platelets high morbidity/ mortality

20 Haematological Disease
 Plasma Volume Haemo-concentration Thrombocytopenia Haemolysis Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation

21 Cardiac / Pulmonary Disease
Pulmonary oedema  ARDS iatrogenic disorder related Pulmonary Embolus High mortality

22 Placental Disease Intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR)
Placental Abruption Intrauterine Death

23 Symptoms Headache Visual disturbance Epigastric / RUQ pain
Nausea / vomiting Rapidly progressive oedema Considerable variation in timing, progression and order of symptoms

24 Signs Hypertension Proteinuria Oedema Abdominal tenderness
Disorientation SGA IUD Hyper-reflexia / involuntary movements / clonus

25 Investigations Urea & Electrolytes Serum Urate Liver Function Tests
Full Blood Count Coagulation Screen CTG Ultrasound - biometry, AFI, Doppler

26 Management Assess risk at booking
Hypertension < 20 weeks - look for secondary cause Antenatal screening - BP, urine, MUAD Treat hypertension Maternal & fetal surveillance Timing of Delivery PIH can be managed as O/P in Day Care Unit

27 Risk Factors Maternal Age (>40 years 2X) Maternal BMI (>30 2X)
Family History (20-25% if mother affected, up to 40% if sister) Parity (first pregnancy 2-3X) Multiple pregnancy (Twins 2X) Previous PET (7X) Molar Pregnancy / Triploidy Multiparous women develop more severe disease

28 Medical Risk Factors Pre-existing renal disease
Pre-existing hypertension Diabetes Mellitus Connective Tissue Disease Thrombophilias (congenital / acquired)

29 Predicting Pre-eclampsia
Normal MUAD Notch Maternal Uterine Artery Doppler weeks

30 Antenatal Screening When to refer to AN DCU? BP  140/90
(++) proteinuria   oedema symptoms - esp persistent headache For every 1000 “Low-risk” patients: 100 hypertensive 60 normal - 20 will return 20 DCU follow up - 10 admitted 20 admitted

31 When to admit? BP >170/110 OR >140/90 with (++) proteinuria
Significant symptoms - headache / visual disturbance / abdominal pain Abnormal biochemistry Significant proteinuria - >300mg / 24h Need for antihypertensive therapy Signs of fetal compromise

32 Inpatient Assessment Blood Pressure - 4 hourly Urinalysis - daily
Input / output fluid balance chart 24 hour urine collection - if proteinuria on urinalysis Bloods - FBC, U&Es, Urate, LFTs. Minimum X2 per week

33 Fetal Surveillance Fetal Movements CTG - daily Ultrasound Biometry
Amniotic Fluid Index Umbilical Artery Doppler Normal AEDF REDF

34 Treatment of Hypertension
Treat regardless of aetiology With MAP ≥150 mmHg there is significant risk of cerebral haemorrhage Most treat if BP ≥150/100 mmHg BP ≥ 170/110 mmHg requires immediate Rx Aim for / mmHg Control of blood pressure does not reduce the risk of developing pre-eclampsia

35 Treatment of Hypertension
Mode of Action Starting Dose Maximum Dose Contra- indications Breast Feeding Methyl Dopa Centrally acting  agonist 250mg bd 1 gram tds Depression Yes Labetolol  +  antagonist 100mg bd 600mg qid Asthma Nifedipine SR Ca channel antagonist 10mg bd 40mg bd Hydralazine Vasodilator 25mg tds 75mg qid (Avoid Diuretics / ACE Inhibitors)

36 When to Deliver? The only cure for pre-eclampsia is delivery
Mother must be stablised before delivery Consider expectant management if pre-term Most women delivered within 2 weeks of diagnosis

37 Indications for Delivery
Term gestation Inability to control BP Rapidly deteriorating biochemistry / haematology Eclampsia Other Crisis Fetal Compromise - REDF, abnormal CTG

38 Crises in Pre-eclampsia
HELLP syndrome Pulmonary Oedema Placental Abruption Cerebral Haemorrhage Cortical Blindness DIC Acute Renal Failure Hepatic Rupture

39 Steroids Promote fetal lung surfactant production
↓ neonatal respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) by up to 50% if administered 24-48h before delivery Administer up to 36 weeks Only significant effects up to 34 weeks. Proven benefit up to 1 week Betamethasone preferred to Dexamethasone 1 course = 12mg Betamethasone IM X2 injections 24 hours apart

40 Eclampsia

41 Eclampsia Tonic-clonic (grand mal) seizure occuring with features of pre-eclampsia >1/3 will have seizure before onset of hypertension / proteinuria Ante-partum (38%) / Intra-partum (16%) / post-partum (44%) More common in teenagers Associated with ischaemia / vasospasm

42 Management of Severe PET / Eclampsia
Control BP Stop / Prevent Seizures Fluid Balance Delivery

43 Antihypertensives IV Labetolol IV Hydralazine
Beware hypotension – fetoplacental unit

44 Seizure Treatment / Prophylaxis
MAGNESIUM SULPHATE Loading dose: 4g IV over 5 minutes Maintenance dose: IV infusion 1g/h If further seizures administer 2g Mg SO4 If persistent seizures consider diazepam 10mg IV

45 Fluid Balance Main cause of death = pulmonary oedema
(Capillary leak / fluid overload / cardiac failure) Oliguria in 30%. Does not require intervention Any doubts about renal function  urine osmolality Fluid challenges are potentially dangerous Safer to run a patient “dry” - 80 ml/h

46 Labour and Delivery Aim for vaginal delivery if possible Control BP
Epidural anaesthesia Continuous electronic fetal monitoring Avoid ergometrine Caution with iv fluids

47 Postpartum Management
Breast feeding Contraception BP management Counselling Future risk Depends on other medical factors Gestation dependent (28/ %, 32/ %) Long term CVD risk

48 Low Dose Aspirin Aspirin - inhibits cyclo-oxygenase  prevents TXA2 synthesis 75mg Aspirin 15%  reduction in PET (NNT=90) May be more beneficial in preventing severe early onset pre-eclampsia (MRC CLASP Trial) Safe Used for high risk women - Renal, DM, APS, Multiple risk factors, previous PET Commence before 12 weeks NICE Aug 2010

49 Calcium, Antioxidants & Folic Acid
Calcium supplementation (>1gram / day) may reduce risk of hypertension (30%), PET (52%) and maternal death (20%). Did not affect pre-term birth or stillbirth (Hofmeyr et al Cochrane Database 2006) Antioxidants not effective (Poston et al. VIP Study, Lancet 2006) Mid trimester folic acid also appears to be effective in preventing pre-eclampsia (73% reduction) (Wen et al AJOG 2008)

50 Conclusions Hypertension in pregnancy is common
Pre-eclampsia is a multi-system disorder with unpredictable and variable manifestations Pathogenesis involves abnormal placentation and widespread endothelial dysfunction Supportive management requires maternal and fetal surveillance No cure other than delivery Maternal risks balanced against risks of prematurity


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