Nocturnal hypertension and risk of developing early-onset preeclampsia in high-risk pregnancies

被引:0
|
作者
Martin R. Salazar
Walter G. Espeche
Carlos E. Leiva Sisnieguez
Julián Minetto
Eduardo Balbín
Adelaida Soria
Osvaldo Yoma
Marcelo Prudente
Soledad Torres
Florencia Grassi
Claudia Santillan
Horacio A. Carbajal
机构
[1] Unidad de Enfermedades Cardiometabólicas,
[2] Servicio de Clínica Médica,undefined
[3] Hospital Gral. San Martín,undefined
[4] Facultad de Ciencias Médicas,undefined
[5] UNLP,undefined
[6] Servicio de Obstetricia,undefined
[7] Hospital Gral. San Martín,undefined
来源
Hypertension Research | 2021年 / 44卷
关键词
Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring; Early-onset preeclampsia; High-risk pregnancy; Nocturnal hypertension;
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学科分类号
摘要
To test the hypothesis that nocturnal hypertension identifies risk for early-onset preeclampsia/eclampsia (PE), we conducted an historical cohort study of consecutive high-risk pregnancies between 1st January 2016 and 31st March 2020. Office blood pressure (BP) measurements and ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) were performed. The cohort was divided into patients without PE or with early- or late-onset PE (<34 and ≥34 weeks of gestation, respectively). The relative risks of office and ABPM hypertension for the development of late- or early-onset PE were estimated with multinomial logistic regression using no PE as a reference category. Four hundred and seventy-seven women (mean age 30 ± 7 years, with 23 ± 7 weeks of gestation at the time of the BP measurements) were analyzed; 113 (23.7%) developed PE, 69 (14.5%) developed late-onset PE, 44 (9.2%) developed early-onset PE. Office and ambulatory BP increased between the groups, and women who developed early-onset PE had significantly higher office and ambulatory BP values than those with late-onset PE or without PE. Hypertension prevalence increased across groups, with the highest values in early-onset PE. Nocturnal hypertension was the most prevalent finding and was highly prevalent in women who developed early-onset PE (88.6%); only 1.6% of women without nocturnal hypertension developed early-onset PE. Additionally, nocturnal hypertension was a stronger predictor for early-onset PE than for late-onset PE (adjusted OR, 5.26 95%CI 1.67–16.60) vs. 2.06, 95%CI 1.26–4.55, respectively). In conclusion, nocturnal hypertension was the most frequent BP abnormality and a significant predictor of early-onset PE in high-risk pregnancies.
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页码:1633 / 1640
页数:7
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