Medical Conditions - Preeclampsia

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Preeclampsia

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The Facts

Preeclampsia is a condition that some women experience during pregnancy. Preeclampsia occurs after week 20 of pregnancy and is characterized by an increase in blood pressure (hypertension) and high levels of protein in the urine (proteinuria). This condition used to be called toxemia of pregnancy.

Preeclampsia can also cause swelling, particularly in the face and hands. This swelling can lead to weight gain outside of the normal weight gain expected during pregnancy. It may also be accompanied by other symptoms such as blurred vision, headache, nausea, and pain in the upper abdomen.

About 3% to 7% of pregnancies are complicated by preeclampsia. Preeclampsia can be either mild or severe. Approximately 1 in 200 women with mild preeclampsia go on to have full-blown eclampsia, a condition leading to seizures that can be fatal to both mother and fetus. As many as 1 in 60 women with severe preeclampsia may develop a seizure. Preeclampsia and eclampsia remain leading causes of maternal death in childbirth.

Women who have high blood pressure before pregnancy have a higher risk of miscarriage or giving birth to babies that are premature, underweight, or stillborn. Women who develop high blood pressure while pregnant (about 7% of pregnancies) run a slightly higher risk of these complications, and women with preeclampsia run the highest risk of all.

Causes

The causes of preeclampsia remain unknown. There are a few theories, and certain characteristics that are more common in sufferers. However, the cause is not yet known.

We do know some risk factors. For example, preeclampsia tends to run in families, just like typical chronic high blood pressure. It’s also more common in racial groups that are especially susceptible to high blood pressure, notably people of African descent. This might suggest that people who are genetically susceptible to high blood pressure are more likely to develop preeclampsia.

The known risk factors for preeclampsia are:

  • being over the age of 40, or under 20
  • first pregnancy
  • preeclampsia in previous pregnancies
  • multiple fetuses (e.g., twins, triplets)
  • African or Indigenous ancestry
  • family history of preeclampsia
  • diabetes
  • preexisting high blood pressure, kidney disease, or blood disorders
  • being overweight before pregnancy

Symptoms and Complications

Technically, preeclampsia is mild if blood pressure is over 140/90 mm Hg (see our condition article on high blood pressure), or if it rises by more than a certain amount and there is protein in the urine or swelling of the hands, ankles, and feet. Severe preeclampsia is diagnosed when blood pressure is over 160/110 mm Hg, accompanied by severe proteinuria, severe headache, abdominal pain, visual problems, or decreased growth of the baby.

Visual problems may occur because high blood pressure stresses the retina, pushing it forward. In extreme cases, this can lead to retinal detachment and possibly blindness.

The baby’s growth may be affected because high blood pressure can affect how much blood flows through the placenta to the baby. Recently, autism and developmental delay have both been linked to severe preeclampsia.

With preeclampsia, a woman’s reflexes become unusually active. Increasing blood pressure will lead to increasing hyperreflexia (overactive reflexes), until eventually uncontrollable seizures result.

Severe complications of preeclampsia include:

  • eclampsia – potentially fatal seizures caused by high intracranial (in the head) blood pressure
  • cerebral (brain) hemorrhage due to burst blood vessels in the brain (the main cause of maternal death)
  • retinal detachment, which may lead to blindness
  • ruptured liver
  • accumulation of fluid in the lungs (pulmonary edema)
  • abruptio placentae – the placenta separates from the wall of the uterus and internal bleeding occurs where it had been attached. The bleeding may be life-threatening to both the mother and the fetus.
  • kidney failure in the mother
  • HELLP syndrome – this stands for hemolysis, elevated liver enzymes, and low platelet count. Hemolysis is destruction of red blood cells in the liver. It’s a normal bodily function, but when it speeds up, as in HELLP syndrome, the cells are killed faster than they can be replaced and anemia is the result. Elevated liver enzymes are a sign of an inflamed or overactive liver. Platelets are tiny blood components largely responsible for clotting blood. Any time that the blood is low in clotting agents (such as platelets), the risk of hemorrhage (bleeding) increases, especially in the brain.

Making the Diagnosis

We don’t know what causes preeclampsia, so we define it by its symptoms.

If a pregnant woman’s blood pressure is over a certain level (140/90 mm Hg) and she has proteinuria (protein in the urine), she has mild preeclampsia. If the blood pressure goes higher still (more than 160/110 mm Hg), and proteinuria is present and other symptoms appear (such as headache, eye problems, abdominal pain, or decreased growth of the baby), she has severe preeclampsia.

If she has a seizure, then she has eclampsia. If her liver, kidney, or blood function is abnormal, then she has HELLP.

Treatment and Prevention

Doctors and hospitals take preeclampsia very seriously. Typically only in the mildest of cases, where high blood pressure can be measured but doesn’t cause any symptoms, is the woman allowed to return home – and only on the condition that she go straight to bed and stay there. If there’s no improvement in a couple of days, the woman is admitted to the hospital for observation.

Lying down for long periods reduces blood pressure. In addition, a woman may be told to lie on her left side. This decreases pressure on several major blood vessels and increases the desire to urinate. Regular urination improves the quality of the circulating blood. It is recommended to drink plenty of liquids. Salt intake should not be reduced – while this is a good idea for chronic high blood pressure, salt is needed during pregnancy.

Medications normally used to control high blood pressure are not used to treat preeclampsia. Instead, magnesium sulphate is injected. This reduces hyperreflexia and reduces the chance of seizures. It also lowers blood pressure at the same time. The same medication is given for full-blown eclampsia. If the blood pressure is not controlled with magnesium sulphate alone, injectable blood pressure medications called labetalol* and hydralazine may be used.

Magnesium sulphate helps to control the symptoms and reduces the risk of fatal complications, but the only thing that will pull mother and baby out of the danger zone is to deliver as quickly as possible. Even if the baby is premature, its chances are better "on the outside." Babies are only left in place when the mother’s blood pressure is responding to treatment and the baby is clearly too small to survive outside the womb.

If the baby is big enough, and the mother’s condition has been stabilized with magnesium sulphate, the doctor will usually give medications to stimulate labour. If for any reason a normal birth poses problems, a caesarean section will be recommended. This operation is very common in Canada.

The mother should be re-evaluated within one week after she has delivered the baby and been discharged from the hospital. Sometimes preeclampsia reoccurs up to 4 weeks after delivery, but usually blood pressure falls steadily from the moment the baby is delivered. Blood pressure usually returns to normal within a few months.

All material copyright MediResource Inc. 1996 – 2021. Terms and conditions of use. The contents herein are for informational purposes only. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition. Source: www.medbroadcast.com/condition/getcondition/Preeclampsia