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Hypertension. 2001;38:736-741

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(Hypertension. 2001;38:736.)
© 2001 American Heart Association, Inc.


Hypertension in Pregnancy

Predictable Blood Pressure Variability in Healthy and Complicated Pregnancies

Ramón C. Hermida; Diana E. Ayala; Manuel Iglesias

From the Bioengineering and Chronobiology Laboratories, University of Vigo, Campus Universitario (R.C.H., D.E.A.), Vigo, Spain; and Obstetrics and Gynecology Department, Hospital Clínico Universitario and Medical School, University of Santiago (M.I.), Santiago de Compostela, Spain.

Correspondence to Professor Ramón C. Hermida, PhD, Director, Bioengineering and Chronobiology Laboratories, ETSI Telecomunicación, Campus Universitario, VIGO (Pontevedra) 36200, Spain. E-mail rhermida{at}tsc.uvigo.es

Abstract

Abstract— With the aim of describing the predictable pattern of blood pressure (BP) variability during gestation, we analyzed 2430 BP series systematically sampled by ambulatory monitoring for 48 consecutive hours every 4 weeks from the first obstetric visit (usually within the first trimester of pregnancy) until delivery in 235 normotensive women, 128 women who developed gestational hypertension, and 40 women who had a final diagnosis of preeclampsia. The pattern of variation along gestation of the 24-hour means of BP and heart rate was established for each group of women by polynomial regression analysis. For normotensive women, results indicate a steady decrease in BP up to 20 weeks of pregnancy, followed by an increase in BP up to the day of delivery, with an average 8% BP increase between the middle of gestation and delivery. In complicated pregnancies, BP is stable until the 22nd week of gestation and then increases linearly for the remainder of the pregnancy. Complicated pregnancies are characterized by a 9% and 13% increase in systolic and diastolic BPs, respectively, during the second half of gestation. Results also indicate that during the first half of pregnancy, systolic but not diastolic BP is slightly elevated in women who developed preeclampsia compared with those who developed gestational hypertension. During the second half of gestation, the linear trend of increasing BP for women who developed preeclampsia has a significantly higher slope than the trend for women with gestational hypertension. For both healthy and complicated pregnancies, heart rate increases until the end of the second trimester and slightly decreases thereafter. This study of women systematically sampled by 48-hour ambulatory BP monitoring throughout gestation confirms the predictable pregnancy-associated variability in BP and provides proper information for the establishment of reference limits for BP to be used in the early diagnosis of hypertensive complications in pregnancy. Those limits should be developed as a function of gestational age, taking into account the trends in BP throughout pregnancy demonstrated here.


Key Words: blood pressure • heart rate • pregnancy • hypertension, pregnancy induced • preeclampsia • blood pressure monitoring, ambulatory




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