1 / 65

Hypertension in Pregnancy

Hypertension in Pregnancy. Presented by Dr A/ Shakor MBChB GEZIRA UNIVERSITY -SUDAN Head of Anatomy Department Somali International University. OBJECTIVES. Be able to define hypertension in relationship to pregnancy. Be able to classify hypertensive diseases in pregnant women.

scottdavid
Download Presentation

Hypertension in Pregnancy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Hypertension in Pregnancy Presented by Dr A/Shakor MBChB GEZIRA UNIVERSITY -SUDAN Head of Anatomy Department Somali International University

  2. OBJECTIVES • Be able to define hypertension in relationship to pregnancy. • Be able to classify hypertensive diseases in pregnant women. • Be able to list criteria for the diagnosis of preeclampsia. • Be able to list criteria for the diagnosis of severe preeclampsia/HELLP syndrome. • Be able to discuss current management considerations. • Understand and discuss the effects of hypertension on the mother and fetus.

  3. Hypertension • Sustained BP elevation of 140/90 or greater. • Proper cuff size. • Measurement taken while seated. • Arm at the level of the heart. • Use Korotkoff sound.

  4. Hypertensive Disease Associated with Pregnancy • Chronic Hypertension. • Gestational Hypertension. • Preeclampsia. • Eclampsia. • HELLP Syndrome.

  5. Hypertensive Disease Associated with Pregnancy • Chronic Hypertension • Diagnosed before the 20th week or present before the pregnancy • Mild hypertension • > 140-180 mmHg systolic • > 90-100 mmHg diastolic • Gestational Hypertension • Preeclampsia • Eclampsia • HEELP Syndrome

  6. Hypertensive Disease Associated with Pregnancy • Chronic Hypertension • Gestational Hypertension • Criteria • Develops after 20 weeks of gestation • Proteinuria is absent • Blood pressures return to normal postpartum • Morbidity is directly related to the degree of hypertension • Preeclampsia • Eclampsia • HEELP Syndrome

  7. Hypertensive Disease Associated with Pregnancy • Chronic Hypertension • Gestational Hypertension • Preeclampsia • Criteria • Develops after 20 weeks • Blood pressure elevated on two occasions at least 6 hours apart • Associated with proteinuria and edema • May occur less than 20 weeks with gestational trophoblastic neoplasia • Eclampsia • HEELP Syndrome

  8. Preeclampsia vs. Severe Preeclampsia Criteria for Preeclampsia Criteria for Severe Preclampsia • Previously normotensive woman • > 140 mmHg systolic • > 90 mmHg diastolic • Proteinuria > 300 mg in 24 hour collection • Nondependent edema • BP > 160 systolic or >110 diastolic • > 5 grof protein in 24 hour urine or > 3+ on 2 dipstick urines greater than 4 hours apart • Oliguria < 500 mL in 24 hours • Cerebral or visual distrubances (headache) • Pulmonary edema or cyanosis • Epigastric or RUQ pain • Evidence of hepatic dysfunction • Thrombocytopenia • Intrauterine growth restriciton (IUGR)

  9. Risk Factors for Preeclampsia • Nulliparity • Multifetal gestations • Maternal age over 35 • Preeclampsia in a previous pregnancy • Chronic hypertension • Pregestational diabetes • Vascular and connective tissue disorders • Nephropathy • Antiphospholipid syndrome • Obesity • African-American race

  10. Risk Factors

  11. Hypertensive Disease Associated with Pregnancy • Chronic Hypertension • Gestational Hypertension • Preeclampsia • Eclampsia • Diagnosis of preeclampsia • Presence of convulsions not explained by a neurologic disorder • Grand mal seizure activity • Occurs in 0.5 to 4% or patients with preeclampsia • HEELP Syndrome

  12. Hypertensive Disease Associated with Pregnancy • Chronic Hypertension • Gestational Hypertension • Preeclampsia • Eclampsia • HELLP Syndrome • A distinct clinical entity with: • Hemolysis, Elevated Liver enzymes, Low Platelets • Occurs in 4 to 12 % of patients with severe preeclampsia • Microangiopathichemolysis • Thrombocytopenia • Hepatocellular dysfunction

  13. Morbidity and Mortality from Hypertensive Disease • Hypertension affects 12 to 22% of pregnant patients • Hypertensive disease is directly responsible for approximately 20% of maternal mortality in the United State

  14. Pathophysiology • Vasospasm. • Uterine vessels. • Hemostasis. • Prostanoid balance. • Endothelium-derived factors. • Lipid peroxide, free radicals and antioxidants.

  15. Pathophysiology • Vasospasm • Predominant finding in gestational hypertension and preeclampsia • Uterine vessels • Hemostasis • Prostanoid balance • Endothelium-derived factors • Lipid peroxide, free radicals and antioxidants

  16. Pathophysiology • Vasospasm • Uterine vessels: • Inadequate maternal vascular response to trophoblastic mediated vascular changes • Endothelial damage • Hemostasis • Prostanoid balance • Endothelium-derived factors • Lipid peroxide, free radicals and antioxidants

  17. Pathophysiology • Vasospasm • Uterine vessels • Hemostasis • Increase platelet activation resulting in consumption • Increased endothelial fibronectin levels • Decreased antithrombin III and α2-antiplasmin levels • Allows for microthrombi development with resultant increase in endothelial damage • Prostanoid balance • Endothelium-derived factors • Lipid peroxide, free radicals and antioxidants

  18. Pathophysiology • Vasospasm • Uterine vessels • Hemostasis • Prostanoid balance • TXA2 promotes: • Vasoconstriction • Platelet aggregation • Endothelium-derived factors • Lipid peroxide, free radicals and antioxidants

  19. Pathophysiology • Vasospasm • Uterine vessels • Hemostasis • Prostanoid balance • Endothelium-derived factors • Nitric oxide is decreased in patients with preeclampsia • As this is a vasodilator, this may result in vasoconstriction • Lipid peroxide, free radicals and antioxidants

  20. Pathophysiology • Vasospasm • Uterine vessels • Hemostasis • Prostanoid balance • Endothelium-derived factors • Lipid peroxide, free radicals and antioxidants • Increased in preeclampsia • Have been implicated in vascular injury

  21. Pathophysiologic Changes • Cardiovascular effects. • Hematologic effects. • Neurologic effects. • Pulmonary effects. • Renal effects. • Fetal effects.

  22. Pathophysiologic Changes • Cardiovascular effects • Hypertension • Increased cardiac output • Increased systemic vascular resistance • Hematologic effects • Neurologic effects • Pulmonary effects • Renal effects • Fetal effects

  23. Pathophysiologic Changes • Cardiovascular effects • Hematologic effects • Hypovolemia. • Elevated hematocrit • Thrombocytopenia • hemolytic anemia. • Low oncotic pressure • Neurologic effects • Pulmonary effects • Renal effects • Fetal effects

  24. Pathophysiologic Changes • Cardiovascular effects • Hematologic effects • Neurologic effects: • Hyperreflexia • Headache • Cerebral edema • Seizures • Pulmonary effects • Renal effects • Fetal effects

  25. Pathophysiologic Changes • Cardiovascular effects • Hematologic effects • Neurologic effects • Pulmonary effects • Pulmonary edema • Renal effects • Fetal effects

  26. Pathophysiologic Changes • Cardiovascular effects • Hematologic effects • Neurologic effects • Pulmonary effects • Renal effects • Decreased glomerular filtration rate • Proteinuria • Oliguria • Acute tubular necrosis • Fetal effects

  27. Pathophysiologic Changes • Cardiovascular effects • Hematologic effects • Neurologic effects • Pulmonary effects • Renal effects • Fetal effects: • Placental abruption • Fetal growth restriction • Oligohydramnios. • Fetal distress • Increased perinatal morbidity and mortality

  28. Management: • The ultimate cure is delivery. • Assess gestational age. • Assess cervix. • Fetal well-being. • Laboratory assessment. • Rule out severe disease!!

  29. Gestational HTN at Term • Delivery is always a reasonable option if term. • If cervix is unfavorable and maternal disease is mild, expectant management with close observation is possible.

  30. Mild Gestational HTN not at Term: • Rule out severe disease • Conservative management • Serial labs • Twice weekly visits • Antenatal fetal surveillance • Outpatient versus inpatient

  31. Indications for Delivery • Worsening BP. • Non-reassuring fetal condition. • Development of severe PIH. • Fetal lung maturity. • Favorable cervix.

  32. Hypertensive Emergencies • Fetal monitoring. • IV access. • IV hydration. • The reason to treat is maternal, not fetal. • May require ICU.

  33. Criteria for Treatment • Diastolic BP > 105-110 • Systolic BP > 200 • Avoid rapid reduction in BP • Do not attempt to normalize BP • Goal is DBP < 105 not < 90 • May precipitate fetal distress

  34. Key Steps Using Vasodilators • 250-500 cc of fluid, IV • Avoid multiple doses in rapid succession • Allow time for drug to work • Maintain LLD position • Avoid over treatment

  35. Acute Medical Therapy • Hydralazine • Labetalol • Nifedipine • Nitroprusside • Diazoxide • Clonidine

  36. Hydralazine • Dose: 5-10 mg every 20 minutes • Onset: 10-20 minutes • Duration: 3-8 hours • Side effects: headache, tachycardia. • Mechanism: peripheral vasodilator

  37. Labetalol • Dose: 20mg, then 40, then 80 every 20 minutes, for a total of 220mg • Onset: 1-2 minutes • Duration: 6-16 hours • Side effects: hypotension • Mechanism: Alpha and Beta block

  38. Nifedipine • Dose: 10 mg , not sublingual • Onset: 5-10 minutes • Duration: 4-8 hours • Side effects: chest pain, headache, tachycardia • Mechanism: CA channel block

  39. Clonidine • Dose: 1 mg po • Onset: 10-20 minutes • Duration: 4-6 hours • Side effects: unpredictable, avoid rapid withdrawal • Mechanism: Alpha agonist, works centrally

  40. Nitroprusside • Dose: 0.2 – 0.8 mg/min IV • Onset: 1-2 minutes • Duration: 3-5 minutes • Side effects: cyanide accumulation, hypotension • Mechanism: direct vasodilator

  41. Seizure Prophylaxis • Magnesium sulfate • 4-6 g bolus • 1-2 g/hour • Monitor urine output. • With renal dysfunction, may require a lower dose

  42. Magnesium Sulfate. • Is not a hypotensive agent • Works as a centrally acting anticonvulsant • Also blocks neuromuscular conduction

  43. Treatment of Eclampsia • Few people die of seizures • Protect patient • Avoid insertion of airways and padded tongue blades • IV access • MGSO4

  44. THE FIRST THING TO DO AT A SEIZURE IS TO TAKE YOUR OWN PULSE!

More Related