You are in: eMedicine Specialties > Pediatrics: Surgery > Gynecology PreeclampsiaArticle Last Updated: Oct 4, 2006AUTHOR AND EDITOR INFORMATIONAuthor: Deborah E Campbell, MD, Professor of Clinical Pediatrics, Albert Einstein College of Medicine; Director, Department of Pediatrics, Division of Neonatology, Weiler Hospital Division of Montefiore Medical Center Deborah E Campbell is a member of the following medical societies: American Academy of Pediatrics, American Association for the Advancement of Science, American Medical Association, National Perinatal Association, New York Academy of Medicine, and New York Academy of Sciences Coauthor(s): M Bruce Jenkins, MD, Director of Neonatal Services, Methodist Hospital North of Memphis; Clinical Assistant Professor, Department of Pediatrics, University of Tennessee at Memphis Editors: Ted Rosenkrantz, MD, Head, Division of Neonatal-Perinatal Medicine, Professor, Departments of Pediatrics and Obstetrics/Gynecology, University of Connecticut School of Medicine; Mary L Windle, PharmD, Adjunct Assistant Professor, University of Nebraska Medical Center College of Pharmacy, Pharmacy Editor, eMedicine.com, Inc; Brian S Carter, MD, FAAP, Professor of Pediatrics, Department of Pediatrics, Division of Neonatology, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine; Co-director, Pediatric Advance Comfort Team, Vanderbilt Children's Hospital; Daniel Rauch, MD, FAAP, Director, Pediatric Hospitalist Program, Associate Professor, Department of Pediatrics, New York University School of Medicine; Maureen Strafford, MD, Arnold P Gold Foundation Associate Professor, Departments of Anesthesiology and Pediatrics, Tufts University and Tufts-New England Medical Center Author and Editor Disclosure Synonyms and related keywords: preeclampsia, hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, gestational hypertension, hypertension of pregnancy, hypertension in pregnancy, pre-eclampsia, pregnancy-induced hypertension, PIH, hypertension, proteinuria, edema, high-risk pregnancy, complications of pregnancy INTRODUCTIONBackgroundPreeclampsia is defined as gestational blood pressure (BP) elevation with proteinuria that develops after 20 weeks' gestation. Preeclampsia is one of 4 major hypertensive disorders of pregnancy. The other 3 conditions that comprise the hypertensive complications of pregnancy include gestational hypertension, chronic hypertension, and chronic hypertension with superimposed preeclampsia. Preeclampsia occurs in 5-8% of pregnancies. Although its pathogenesis is incompletely understood, it is a major cause of maternal and neonatal morbidity and mortality. Eclampsia; the occurrence of seizures, coma, or both in the setting of preeclampsia; and hemolysis, elevated liver enzymes, and low platelets (HELLP) syndrome are manifestations of severe preeclampsia. The outcome for infants born to women with preeclampsia depends on the infant's gestational age and condition at delivery, the severity of the maternal hypertensive disease, end-organ involvement, and any other associated comorbid maternal conditions. Preterm birth is more common among pregnancies complicated by preeclampsia, which accounts for up to 15% of preterm deliveries. As the understanding of the hypertensive disorders of pregnancy has grown, the term pregnancy-induced hypertension (PIH) is no longer recommended to describe preeclampsia. Although preeclampsia is primarily a disease of primigravidas, multiple clinical risk factors that increase the predisposition to develop this disease have been identified. Risk factors include black race, past obstetric history, genetic predisposition, obesity, BP at the initiation of pregnancy, multifetal gestation, advanced maternal age, and preexisting vascular insufficiency, insulin resistance, or thrombophilia. Preeclampsia is a multisystem disorder that affects the fetus because of uteroplacental insufficiency. Fetal outcomes include stillbirth, intrauterine growth restriction, low birth weight, and prematurity. PathophysiologyThe current concepts regarding the pathophysiology of preeclampsia recognize that preeclampsia is a multisystem disorder characterized by vasoconstriction, metabolic changes, endothelial dysfunction, and activation of the coagulation cascade in conjunction with an inflammatory response. A 2-stage model of preeclampsia has been proposed in which failure of placental vascular remodeling results in reduced placental perfusion and initiates a cascade of events that result in serious maternal illness with the potential for significant perinatal morbidity and death. Women with underlying microvascular disease, such as diabetes, hypertension, and collagen vascular disease, have a higher incidence of preeclampsia. Normal placental development involves progressive loss of the musculoelastic tissue in the spiral arteries that feed the vessels of the intervillous spaces, which results in uterine blood flow increases of nearly 25% during the first trimester. This process of remodeling the maternal spiral arteries that branch from the uterine artery is typically completed by 18-20 weeks' gestation. In women destined to develop preeclampsia (and in infants who are small for gestational age or whose mothers have diabetes mellitus), this physiologic dilatation of the spiral arteries does not occur because the placental trophoblast cells do not invade the spiral arteries, resulting in maintenance of narrow vessels with resultant placental hypoperfusion and ischemia. In severe cases, not only do the spiral arteries maintain their muscular structure, but other pathologic changes also occur. Accumulation of fat-laden macrophages with fibrinoid necrosis (ie, acute atherosis), disruption of the basement membranes, platelet deposition, mural thrombi, and proliferation of intimal and smooth muscle cells all decrease the luminal diameter. The narrowed and damaged spiral arteries become thrombosed, resulting in placental infarction and necrosis. Uteroplacental blood flow is then reduced by 50-75%. The anatomical reduction in blood flow may be complicated by vasospasm of the uteroplacental bed. The primary defect in preeclampsia appears to originate at the maternal-fetal interface (the placenta). Decreased placental perfusion is thought to lead to fetoplacental ischemia. The ischemic placenta may produce circulating antiangiogenic factors that promote generalized maternal vascular endothelium dysfunction, leading to systemic manifestations of preeclampsia. Associated abnormalities in clotting and platelet function contribute to vasoconstriction and platelet adhesion and aggregation, as well as to the activation of coagulation factors that increase the risk of thromboembolic formation. The primary feature of preeclampsia, development of hypertension, occurs when normally extreme vasodilatation does not occur. Although cardiac output increases 30-50%, the decreased peripheral vascular resistance (PVR) results in decreased BP, even in women with chronic hypertension. Women who develop preeclampsia experience an increase in PVR and alterations in vascular sensitivity to endogenous hormones (eg, angiotensin II, catecholamines, vasopressin). This increase in vascular reactivity to pressor hormones may be mediated, at least in part, through damage to vascular endothelial cells, disrupting the normal prostaglandin balance. The normal expansion of blood volume by 50% that occurs with pregnancy is decreased by 15-20% in patients with preeclampsia. This is the result of diminished plasma volume, leading to the relative hemoconcentration observed in preeclampsia. The plasma volume abnormality involves a redistribution of extracellular fluid, such that interstitial fluid volume is increased while the plasma volume is decreased. The hematocrit increases as the severity of preeclampsia increases. Circulating blood volume is maintained by the increased vascular tone. Whether the vasospasm is the cause or effect of the vascular endothelial injury is not known. Regardless, this injury likely results in the microangiopathic hemolysis and disseminated intravascular coagulation that accompanies severe preeclampsia. The increased circulating blood volume and cardiac output of normal pregnancy results in increased renal blood flow and glomerular filtration rates (GFRs). Women with preeclampsia have markedly decreased renal blood flow and GFRs. Renal biopsies of these women show a constellation of lesions, termed glomerular capillary endotheliosis. Some consider glomerular capillary endothelial swelling that is accompanied by deposits of fibrinogen degradation products within and under the endothelial cells as pathognomonic of the disease. These lesions resolve within a month of delivery. FrequencyUnited StatesHypertensive disorders affect 12-22% of pregnancies; 70% of these pregnancies are hypertensive secondary to preeclampsia or the preeclampsia-eclampsia syndrome. Preeclampsia is primarily a disease of primigravidas. The disease is mild in 75% of cases. The recurrence rate of preeclampsia in future pregnancies varies based on the prior obstetric history. Women who were normotensive in their first pregnancy are at lowest risk. Among women who experienced uncomplicated hypertension during their first pregnancy, the risk of preeclampsia during the second pregnancy is reported to be 5-7%. Pregnancy complicated by early severe preeclampsia increases the recurrence risk to 60-80%. The frequency of preeclampsia complicating pregnancy is further influenced by genetic factors, with studies reporting higher rates of preeclampsia among primiparous siblings. Paternal genes may also have a role in abnormal placentation and the genesis of preeclampsia. InternationalPreeclampsia-eclampsia syndrome accounts for 90% of maternal pregnancy-related deaths in developing countries. Although the exact prevalence is unknown, approximately 2-4% of pregnancies (4 million women) are estimated to be complicated by preeclampsia annually; 2% of these women develop eclampsia. Among nulliparous women, the incidence of preeclampsia is reported to be 5-7%. The actual incidence varies by country, with reported rates up to 18% in parts of Africa. In the United Kingdom, 15% of maternal deaths are related to preeclampsia-eclampsia syndrome. High rates of neonatal mortality are reported in pregnancies complicated by preeclampsia (11.5%) and eclampsia (30%). Mortality/MorbidityMaternal morbidity includes severe bleeding from placental abruption, coagulopathy, pulmonary edema, acute renal failure, cerebral hemorrhage, liver rupture, and retinal detachment.
RaceRelating the frequency of preeclampsia to race is difficult. However, the spectrum of preeclampsia-eclampsia is observed more commonly in black women and is thought to be related to a higher prevalence of hypertensive disorders found in the black population. This is exaggerated by cases of preeclampsia in nulliparous women. Some studies note up to a 3-fold higher risk among black women, while other studies have not found an increased risk in black women. Individual maternal and paternal genetic factors that appear to increase the risk for development of preeclampsia have been identified. These include conditions under which maternal fetal genotypic concordance changes, such as with differing paternity in multiparous pregnancies and paternal family history of preeclampsia. Genetic variations further influence susceptibility to preeclampsia and the other hypertensive disorders of pregnancy. Data have shown that rates of preeclampsia are lower among Asians, with both maternity and paternity contributing to a lower rate of disease. Among the Hispanic population, results are more varied, in large part because of the diversity in racial and genetic makeup among women and men of Hispanic origin. Emerging data suggest that Hispanic women may be at an increased risk for preeclampsia (independent of confounding factors such as baseline BP, obesity, diabetes, and multiple gestation), although the risk for gestational hypertension appears to be low among Hispanic women who are not obese or hypertensive. SexBy definition, preeclampsia is a disease of pregnant women. AgeMaternal age of younger 20 years and older than 35-40 years are among the clinical risk factors for the development of preeclampsia. The increased incidence of preeclampsia noted among patients older than 35 years probably reflects undiagnosed chronic hypertension with superimposed PIH. CLINICALHistoryThe onset of preeclampsia rarely occurs before 20 weeks' gestation. Hypertension is typically the first clinical sign that preeclampsia is developing. Most women typically experience gradual development of hypertension, proteinuria (>0.3 g protein in a 24-h urine specimen), and edema in the latter part of the third trimester. The clinical presentation includes sudden weight gain with the development of edema, particularly of the face and upper extremities. In women with preexisting chronic hypertension and proteinuria before 20 weeks' gestation, the preeclampsia can be diagnosed when the BP is exacerbated BP (systolic >160 mm Hg or diastolic >110 mm Hg) during the last half of pregnancy or when proteinuria significantly increases. Gestational hypertension is the occurrence of hypertension, typically mild, without proteinuria or other signs of preeclampsia, that develops in late pregnancy. It may be transient in nature, resolving by 12 weeks postpartum or may represent underlying chronic hypertension. Among women with the onset of gestational hypertension before 30 weeks' gestation, the risk for development of preeclampsia is increased.
PhysicalPreeclampsia is a disease of the pregnant woman.
CausesThe cause of preeclampsia has not been fully elucidated. Current evidence suggests an important role of reduced placental perfusion leading to maternal disease that is characterized in reduced systemic blood flow, endothelial dysfunction, and the potential for multiple organ injury. DIFFERENTIALSHypertension WORKUPLab Studies
Imaging Studies
Histologic FindingsPlacental histology reveals abnormal syncytiotrophoblast with increased mitotic activity. Trophoblast basement membrane thickening also is observed. TREATMENTMedical CareIncomplete understanding of the genesis and underlying pathophysiology in preeclampsia has impeded attempts at prevention. Empiric approaches of dietary manipulations, low-dose aspirin, use of diuretics or antihypertensives, and manipulations of mineral and electrolyte concentrations have not produced consistent results. Resolution of the disease only occurs after delivery of the placenta. Antepartum management is fraught with controversies before 37 weeks' gestation. In mild cases, fetal and maternal surveillance may allow pregnancy to proceed toward maturity, while prevention of CNS effects, control of hypertension, and management of fluid balance is attempted. Timing and mode of delivery are obstetrical decisions generally based on the maternal and fetal condition. Maternal treatment often includes magnesium sulfate infusions. Depending on the duration of infusion and maternal blood levels, this may result in symptomatic neonatal hypermagnesemia. Although the hypotonia and apnea are transient, they may result in the need for respiratory support in the infant. Among infants born to women with preeclampsia who exhibited absent or reverse end-diastolic umbilical artery Doppler flow velocity on fetal monitoring, an increased frequency of hypoglycemia and polycythemia that is independent of the degree of gestational age and fetal growth restriction has been found. Surgical CarePreeclampsia is not a surgical disease of the mother or affected newborn. However, cesarean delivery may be required to address increasing maternal disease severity and minimize maternal and fetal-neonatal morbidity and mortality. ConsultationsConsultation with a neonatologist may be appropriate when caring for a newborn with low birth weight who was delivered to a mother with preeclampsia. Problems such as hypotonia, apnea, hypoglycemia, infection, hyperviscosity, and difficulties with thermoregulation may require a neonatologist's management. Diet
ActivityRecommendations for activity vary, depending on the presence of associated problems of prematurity or, perhaps, hypotonia. MEDICATIONDrug therapy is not applicable to this discussion, with the exception of the medication safety considerations among women choosing to breastfeed their infants. Preeclampsia is a maternal disease that affects the fetus. No specific drug therapy for the fetus exists. Breastfeeding is permissible if the mother has received treatment with magnesium sulfate or certain beta-blockers and calcium channel blockers. Labetalol and propranolol are preferred for initial maternal antihypertensive therapy because these drugs are not concentrated in breast milk, unlike other beta-blockers. Sustained-release nifedipine or verapamil are acceptable alternatives. Diuretics may reduce milk volume and should be avoided. FOLLOW-UPFurther Inpatient Care
Further Outpatient Care
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Deterrence/Prevention
Complications
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MISCELLANEOUSMedical/Legal Pitfalls
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Article Last Updated: Oct 4, 2006 |