Preeclampsia and High Blood Pressure During Pregnancy
Topic Overview
What are high blood pressure and preeclampsia?
Blood pressure is a measure of how hard your blood pushes against the
walls of your arteries. If the force is too hard, you have
high blood pressure (also called hypertension). When
high blood pressure starts after 20 weeks of pregnancy, it may be a sign of a
very serious problem called
preeclampsia.
Blood pressure is shown as
two numbers. The top number (systolic) is the pressure when the
heart pumps blood. The bottom number (diastolic) is
the pressure when the heart relaxes and fills with blood. Blood pressure is
high if the top number is more than 140 millimeters of mercury (mm Hg), or if
the bottom number is more than 90 mm Hg. For example, blood pressure of 150/85
(say "150 over 85") or 140/95 is high. Or both numbers can be high, such as
150/95.
A woman may have high blood pressure before she gets
pregnant. Or her blood pressure may start to go up during pregnancy.
If you have high blood pressure during pregnancy, you need to have
checkups more often than women who do not have this problem. There is no way to
know if you will get preeclampsia. This is one of the reasons that you are
watched closely during your pregnancy.
High blood pressure and
preeclampsia are related, but they have some differences.
High blood pressure
Normally, a woman's blood
pressure drops during her second
trimester. Then it returns to normal by the end of the
pregnancy. But in some women, blood pressure goes up very high in the second or
third trimester. This is sometimes called gestational hypertension and can lead
to preeclampsia. You will need to have your blood pressure checked often and
you may need treatment. Usually, the problem goes away after the baby is
born.
High blood pressure that started before pregnancy usually
doesn't go away after the baby is born.
A small rise in blood
pressure may not be a problem. But your doctor will watch your pressure to make
sure it does not get too high. The doctor also will check you for
preeclampsia.
Very high blood pressure keeps your baby from
getting enough blood and oxygen. This could limit your baby's growth or cause
the
placenta to pull away too soon from the uterus. High
blood pressure also could lead to
stillbirth.
Preeclampsia
Preeclampsia is
a pregnancy-related problem. The symptoms of preeclampsia include new high
blood pressure after 20 weeks of pregnancy along with other problems, such as
protein in your urine. Preeclampsia usually goes away after you give birth. In
rare cases, blood pressure can stay high for up to 6 weeks after the
birth.
Preeclampsia can be deadly for the mother and baby. It can
keep the baby from getting enough blood and oxygen. It also can harm the
mother's
liver,
kidneys, and brain. Women with very bad preeclampsia
can have dangerous seizures. This is called
eclampsia.
What causes preeclampsia and high blood pressure during pregnancy?
Experts don't know the exact cause of preeclampsia and
high blood pressure during pregnancy. But they have some ideas about
preeclampsia:
Preeclampsia seems to start because the
placenta doesn't grow the usual network of blood vessels deep in the wall of
the uterus. This leads to poor blood flow in the
placenta.
Preeclampsia may run in families. If your mother had
preeclampsia while she was pregnant with you, you have a higher chance of
getting it during pregnancy. You also have a higher chance of getting it if the
mother of your baby's father had preeclampsia.
The mother's
immune system may react to the father's sperm, the
placenta, or the baby.
Already having high blood pressure when you
get pregnant raises your chance of getting preeclampsia.
High blood pressure
usually doesn't cause symptoms. But very high blood pressure sometimes causes
headaches and shortness of breath or changes in vision.
Mild
preeclampsia usually doesn't cause symptoms, either. But preeclampsia can cause
rapid weight gain and sudden swelling of the hands and face. Severe
preeclampsia causes symptoms of organ trouble, such as a very bad headache and
trouble seeing and breathing. It also can cause belly pain and decreased
urination.
How are high blood pressure and preeclampsia diagnosed?
High blood pressure and preeclampsia are usually found during a prenatal
visit. This is one reason why it's so important to go to all of your prenatal
visits. You need to have your blood pressure checked often. During these
visits, your blood pressure is measured with a
blood pressure cuff. A sudden increase in blood pressure often is the first
sign of a problem.
You also will have a urine test to look for
protein, another sign of preeclampsia.
If you have high blood
pressure, tell your doctor right away if you have a headache or belly pain.
These signs of preeclampsia can occur before protein shows up in your
urine.
How are they treated?
Your doctor may have you
take medicine if he or she thinks your blood pressure is too high.
The only cure for preeclampsia is having the baby. You may get medicines
to lower your blood pressure and to prevent seizures. You also may get medicine
to help your baby's lungs get ready for birth. Your doctor will try to deliver
your baby when the baby has grown enough to be ready for birth. But sometimes a
baby has to be delivered early to protect the health of the mother or the baby.
If this happens, your baby will get special care for premature babies.
Do preeclampsia and high blood pressure lead to long-term high blood pressure?
If you have high blood pressure during pregnancy
but had normal blood pressure before pregnancy, your pressure is likely to go
back to normal after you have the baby. But if you had high blood pressure
before pregnancy, you probably will still have it after you give birth.
Experts don't think preeclampsia causes high blood pressure later in
life. But women who get preeclampsia may have a higher-than-normal chance of
getting high blood pressure after pregnancy or later in life.1
Frequently Asked Questions
Learning about high blood pressure and preeclampsia during pregnancy:
The causes of
preeclampsia and
high blood pressure during pregnancy are poorly
understood. In fact, preeclampsia is sometimes called the "disease of
theories," and its cause is the subject of active research.2
Preeclampsia may start with a poorly developed
placenta that doesn't circulate blood normally. But
the cause of the placenta disorder isn't yet clear. Nor is it known why the
mother's body then develops high blood pressure. So far, a number of possible
factors are thought to play a part in preeclampsia, including:
Family history (genetics). The tendency to develop
preeclampsia may run in families. Inherited factors (genes) seem to
make a woman more likely to develop preeclampsia.
An abnormal immune system response. Preeclampsia
occurs most often in women who are pregnant for the first time and in women who
have been pregnant before but now have a first pregnancy with a different man.
Experts think that some women may have an
immune system reaction that triggers the
condition.1 Exposure to an
antigen from the father (in the growing
placenta or fetus, for example) may trigger an immune
response in the woman's body. This immune response may result in narrowing of
the blood vessels throughout the body, causing higher blood pressure and other
problems.
A biochemical factor that causes the blood vessels to narrow, raising blood pressure. Preeclampsia may be the body's reaction to
the poorly functioning placenta. Or both the poorly developed placenta and
preeclampsia symptoms may be caused by the same factor. This process is not yet
well understood.3
Diabetes or other diseases affecting blood vessels. Conditions that cause blood vessel problems (such as
lupus, preexisting high blood pressure, or
diabetes) may increase the risk of
preeclampsia.
Symptoms
High blood pressure
If you have developed
high blood pressure, you will probably not have any
symptoms. It usually requires a blood pressure check with a blood pressure cuff
and stethoscope to detect elevated blood pressure.
Blood pressure
measured at 140/90 millimeters of mercury (mm Hg) or higher is classified as
high (hypertensive) and 160/110 mm Hg or higher is classified as severe.
Preeclampsia
Symptoms of
preeclampsia can develop gradually or suddenly.
Symptoms include:
Systolic blood pressure is over 140
mm Hg, or diastolic blood pressure is over 90 mm Hg, or both, for two
measurements taken at least 6 hours apart.
Protein in the urine is
usually higher than normal. High urine protein is 300 milligrams (mg) measured
in 24 hours or protein consistently showing 1+ or greater on a dipstick.
Although you may have other symptoms, you will not be
diagnosed with preeclampsia unless you also have high blood pressure or high
protein in your urine. Other symptoms of mild preeclampsia may include:
Swelling of the hands and face that does not
go away during the day. (If you have no other signs or symptoms of
preeclampsia, this swelling is probably a sign of normal
pregnancy.)
Rapid weight gain [more than
2 lb (0.9 kg) per week or
6 lb (2.7 kg) per
month].
Bleeding from a cut or injury that lasts longer than
usual.
Severe preeclampsia
In severe preeclampsia,
systolic blood pressure is over 160 mm Hg, or diastolic blood pressure is over
110 mm Hg, or both.1
As blood circulation
to the organs decreases, more severe symptoms can develop, including:
A severe headache that will not go away
with medicine such as acetaminophen.
Blurred or dimming vision,
spots in the visual field, or periods of blindness.
Decreased
urination [less than
2 cups (500 mL) in 24
hours].
Persistent abdominal pain or tenderness, especially on the
upper right side.
Difficulty breathing, especially when lying
flat.
HELLP syndrome.
HELLP syndrome is a life-threatening liver disorder.
It is usually related to preeclampsia. Get emergency medical treatment if you
have several symptoms of HELLP syndrome. Symptoms include:
Pain in the upper right abdomen
(liver).
Shoulder, neck, and other upper body pain (this pain also
originates in the liver).
Fatigue.
Nausea and
vomiting.
Headache.
Vision problems.
HELLP is short for Hemolysis (destruction of red blood cells), Elevated Liver enzymes (which indicate
liver damage), and Low
Platelet count.
Severe preeclampsia increases the risk of seizures
(eclampsia).
Eclampsia
When preeclampsia leads to
seizures that are not from any other cause, it is
called
eclampsia. Eclampsia is life-threatening for both a
mother and her fetus. During a seizure, the oxygen supply to the fetus is
drastically reduced. Call 911 any time a pregnant woman has a
seizure.
What Happens
Normally, a pregnant woman's
blood pressure is slightly lower than normal during the second
trimester and then gradually returns to normal
throughout the remainder of her pregnancy. However, in 10% of pregnant women,
blood pressure begins to increase to abnormally high levels (hypertension) sometime after 20 weeks of
pregnancy.4 This is occasionally referred to as
gestational hypertension. Less commonly, this change in blood pressure develops
during the first days after childbirth.
At the first sign of high
blood pressure during pregnancy, your health professional cannot predict
whether it will remain mild, become severe, or turn out to be an early sign of
preeclampsia. If you are developing preeclampsia, your
urine test (urine screen) will probably show increased protein levels before
long. This sign that your kidneys are being affected by the condition doesn't
develop right away.
If you aren't certain that you had normal
blood pressure before pregnancy, it is possible that you have preexisting
chronic high blood pressure. If so, your blood pressure may remain high after
your pregnancy.
High blood pressure that develops during pregnancy
High blood pressure that develops before the 20th week
of pregnancy is usually a sign of ongoing (chronic) high blood pressure or
short-term, mild high blood pressure. In rare cases, it is an early sign of
preeclampsia.
High blood pressure that
occurs after midpregnancy could be a sign that you are developing preeclampsia.
This can be anytime after the 20th week.
Chronic high blood pressure and pregnancy
Women
with chronic high blood pressure (hypertension) who become
pregnant normally have a drop in blood pressure during the first two
trimesters. During the late second or in the third trimester, however, blood
pressure returns to higher-than-normal levels. Following delivery, their blood
pressure remains high. For more information, see the topic High Blood Pressure
(Hypertension).
Chronic high blood pressure increases your risk
of preeclampsia during pregnancy.
Most women with chronic high
blood pressure who are otherwise healthy have a low risk for other
cardiovascular problems during pregnancy.
Preeclampsia
Preeclampsia affects your blood
pressure,
placenta,
liver, blood,
kidneys, and brain. Preeclampsia can be mild or
severe, and it may get worse gradually or rapidly. Both you and your fetus can
potentially suffer life-threatening problems involving the following:
Blood pressure. Blood
volume doesn't increase as much as it should during pregnancy. This can affect
fetal growth and well-being. The blood vessels also increase their resistance
against blood flow (vasospasm), increasing blood pressure.
Placenta. The blood vessels of the placenta don't grow deep
into the uterus as they should, nor do they widen as they normally would. This
makes them unable to provide normal blood flow to the fetus.
Liver. Impaired blood circulation to the liver can cause liver
damage. Liver impairment is related to the life-threatening
HELLP syndrome, which requires emergency medical treatment.
Kidneys. During a normal pregnancy,
kidney
function increases by up to 50%.5 When affected by
preeclampsia, kidney function is usually higher than before pregnancy but not
as high as necessary for a healthy pregnancy. This is called mild renal
insufficiency.
Brain. Vision impairment,
persistent headaches, and seizures (eclampsia) can develop, probably in
relation to reduced blood flow to or within the brain. Less than 1% of women
who have preeclampsia suffer one or more seizures.6
Eclampsia can lead to maternal coma and fetal and maternal death. This is why
women with preeclampsia are often given medicine to prevent
eclampsia.
Blood. Low
platelet levels in the blood are common with
preeclampsia. In rare cases, a potentially life-threatening blood-clotting and
bleeding problem develops along with severe preeclampsia.1 This condition is called disseminated intravascular
coagulation (DIC). After delivery, DIC goes away. In the meantime, you may be
given a medicine (clotting factor), blood transfusion, or platelet transfusion.
Delivery of the baby and placenta is the only "cure"
for preeclampsia. If your condition becomes dangerous enough that delivery is
necessary but you don't go into labor, your doctor will induce labor or
surgically deliver the baby (cesarean section). Unless you have
chronic high blood pressure, your blood pressure should return to normal in a
few days. In severe cases, this can take 6 or more weeks.1
The infant
The earlier in the pregnancy that
preeclampsia begins and/or the more severe the condition becomes, the greater
the risk of preterm birth, which can cause newborn problems. For more
information, see the topic
Premature Infant.
An infant born before
37 weeks may have difficulty breathing because of immature lungs (respiratory distress syndrome). A newborn affected by
preeclampsia may also be smaller than normal (intrauterine growth restriction).
This is because of inadequate nutrition from poor blood flow through the
placenta.
Fetal death happens in about 1 out of 100 women who
have severe preeclampsia.6
What Increases Your Risk
Risk factors for developing
preeclampsia during pregnancy include:
High blood pressure in a past
pregnancy, especially before week 34.
Personal history of
preeclampsia.
Family history of preeclampsia.
Obesity
(more than 20% over ideal weight) at the time of conception. If your weight is
within this range, the higher your prepregnancy
body mass index, the greater your preeclampsia
risk.7
Multiple pregnancy (such as twins
or triplets).
First pregnancy ever, first-time pregnancy with
current partner, or first pregnancy in the past 10 years.8
Pregnancy from in vitro fertilization using donor
eggs.9
Women with chronic high blood pressure have an increased
risk of the premature separation of the placenta from the uterine wall (placenta abruptio). This risk may increase when:
A mother smokes during
pregnancy.
Preeclampsia develops in addition to chronic high blood
pressure.
A mother uses certain drugs, such as cocaine.
There
is an injury to the uterus, such as in a car accident or a fall.
Preeclampsia probably does not cause future high blood
pressure. Instead, experts think that some women who have preeclampsia also
have a higher-than-normal risk of chronic high blood pressure after pregnancy
or later in life.1
When To Call a Doctor
Seizures
If you have
preeclampsia, it is possible that you will have an
unexpected seizure (eclampsia). Eclampsia can lead to a
coma and is life-threatening to both you and your fetus.
Someone
must call 911 or other emergency services immediately if you are having an
eclamptic seizure.
Seek medical care immediately
if you are pregnant and begin to have symptoms of preeclampsia, such as:
Blurred vision or other vision
problems.
Frequent headaches that are becoming worse or a
persistent headache that does not respond to nonprescription pain
medicine.
Pain or tenderness in your abdomen, especially in the
upper right section.
Weight gain of
2 lb (0.91 kg) or more over a
24-hour period.
Shoulder, neck, and other upper body pain (this pain originates
in the liver).
If you have mild high blood pressure or mild preeclampsia,
you may not have any symptoms. It is important to see a health professional
regularly throughout your pregnancy. Your blood pressure will be checked and
your urine will be tested at every visit so that any abnormal rise in blood
pressure or urinary protein can be easily detected.
Watchful Waiting
Symptoms such as heartburn or swelling in the legs
and feet are normal during pregnancy and are not usually symptoms of
preeclampsia. You can discuss these symptoms with your doctor or nurse-midwife
at your next scheduled prenatal visit. But if swelling occurs along with other
symptoms of preeclampsia, contact your doctor immediately.
Who To See
If you have developed high blood
pressure and preeclampsia during pregnancy, you can be treated by:
High blood pressure (hypertension) and
preeclampsia are typically detected during regular
prenatal checkups. Because these conditions can get worse rapidly and can be
life-threatening to you and your fetus, it's important that you have regular
checkups during your pregnancy.
Screen for chronic high blood pressure
(hypertension). It's important to know whether you have chronic high blood
pressure before becoming pregnant, because it increases your risk of developing
preeclampsia.
Provide a baseline measurement that can be compared
with later readings during pregnancy.
Routine prenatal tests
Certain tests are given at
each prenatal visit to monitor for high blood pressure and preeclampsia. These
include a:
Urine test for excess protein in the
urine (proteinuria), a sign of preeclamptic kidney damage.
Weight
measurement. (Rapid weight gain can be an indicator of preeclamptic fluid
retention.)
Tests for pregnant women considered high-risk for preeclampsia
Other tests may also be used to monitor for signs of
preeclampsia, including:
Blood tests to check for blood
abnormalities (as in
HELLP syndrome) and for signs of kidney damage.
(Elevated uric acid in the blood is often the earliest sign of
preeclampsia.)
Creatinine clearance test, which
requires both a blood sample and a 24-hour urine collection, to assess kidney
function.
24-hour urine collection test to assess protein in the
urine.
Tests for women with preeclampsia
If results from
one or more of the above tests suggest that you have preeclampsia, you and your
fetus will be closely monitored throughout the remainder of your pregnancy. The
type and frequency of testing depend on the severity of the preeclampsia and
the time remaining until your pregnancy reaches full term (37 to 42 completed
weeks). Testing is more frequent and extensive when preeclampsia is severe and
the pregnancy is far from full-term (less than 36 weeks).
Tests that may be given to assess your health if you
have preeclampsia include:
A
physical exam for signs and symptoms of preeclampsia
that is getting worse.
Blood tests to check for blood abnormalities
and kidney damage.
A creatinine clearance test, which requires both
blood and urine samples, to assess kidney function.
Tests for women with eclampsia
If you have a
seizure (eclampsia), one or more of the following tests may be
done after delivery to assess your brain function and condition:
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) uses a magnetic field
and pulses of radio wave energy to provide pictures of organs and structures
inside the body.
An
electroencephalogram (EEG) measures the brain's
electrical activity using sensors attached to your head and connected by wires
to a computer.
Tests for the fetus
If you develop high blood
pressure, preeclampsia, or both, your fetus's health also will be closely
monitored. The more severe your condition, the more frequent the fetal testing,
ranging from once a week to daily.
Tests commonly used to monitor
fetal health include:
Less commonly,
amniocentesis is used to check fetal well-being if
preterm delivery is being considered as a treatment option. For this procedure,
a needle is inserted into your abdomen to collect amniotic fluid from inside
the uterus. The fluid is then checked for chemical signs that the fetus's lungs
are mature.
Early Detection
Throughout your pregnancy, prenatal visits will
include routine blood pressure measurements and urine tests to screen for
preeclampsia.
Treatment Overview
If your blood pressure begins to
rise during pregnancy, you will need close monitoring until after your baby is
born. Your blood pressure may remain mildly elevated, which is not considered
dangerous for you or your fetus. But it can become dangerous if it turns out to
be a sign of
preeclampsia or if it progresses to more severe
high blood pressure (hypertension).
High blood pressure (hypertension) during pregnancy
If you have high blood pressure during your pregnancy, your treatment may
include:
Close monitoring by a
doctor for signs of preeclampsia.
Blood pressure medicine. Your doctor may have you take medicine if he or she thinks
your blood pressure is too high. Some women with ongoing (chronic) high blood
pressure stay on antihypertensive medicine but are prescribed a lower dose
during pregnancy if their blood pressure improves.
Mild
high blood pressure in pregnancy usually only requires close monitoring. If you
have high blood pressure that is rapidly increasing or has reached moderately
high levels (above 140/105 mm Hg, or millimeters of mercury), you may be
treated with blood pressure medicine.
Severe high blood pressure
(higher than 160 mm Hg
systolic or 110 mm Hg
diastolic) can result in poor fetal growth
(intrauterine growth restriction) and is likely to be treated with an
antihypertensive medicine.
Some high blood pressure medicines are dangerous during pregnancy.10 If you take high blood pressure medicines, talk to your doctor about
the safety of your medicine before you become pregnant or as soon as you learn
you are pregnant. Make sure that your doctor has a complete list of all
medicines that you are taking.
Preeclampsia and eclampsia
If you show any signs
of preeclampsia, you will be closely monitored, either with frequent office
visits or in the hospital. The goal of treatment is to prevent preeclampsia
from becoming life-threatening to you and your fetus while prolonging the
pregnancy long enough for your fetus to be mature and healthy at birth.
Your treatment will last for the rest of your pregnancy, your delivery,
and your first postpartum weeks and will depend on how severe your condition
is. Treatment options include an anticonvulsant medicine; blood pressure
medicine if your blood pressure is dangerously high; and delivery, which is the
only known "cure" for preeclampsia.
For mild preeclampsia that is not rapidly
getting worse, you may only have to reduce your level of activity, monitor how
you feel, and have frequent office visits and testing.
For moderate or severe preeclampsia, or for preeclampsia
that is rapidly getting worse, you will require hospitalization, where
expectant management typically includes bed rest,
medicine, and close monitoring of you and your fetus. Severe preeclampsia or an
eclamptic seizure is treated with
magnesium sulfate. This medicine can stop a seizure
and can prevent seizures. If you are near delivery or have severe preeclampsia,
your doctor will plan to deliver your baby as soon as possible.
If
your condition becomes life-threatening to you or your fetus, magnesium sulfate
to prevent seizure and delivery are the only treatment options. If you are less
than 34 weeks pregnant and a 24- to 48-hour delay is possible, you will likely
be given
antenatal corticosteroids to speed up fetal lung
development before delivery.
After childbirth
If you have moderate to severe
preeclampsia, your risk of seizures (eclampsia) continues for the first 24 to
48 hours after childbirth (in very rare cases, seizures are reported later in
the postpartum period). You may therefore continue
magnesium sulfate for 24 hours after delivery.1
Unless you have chronic high blood pressure,
your blood pressure is likely to return to normal a few days after delivery. In
rare cases, it can take 6 weeks or more. Some women still have high blood
pressure 6 weeks after childbirth yet return to normal levels over the long
term. If your diastolic blood pressure reading (the lower, second number) is
still over 100 mm Hg when you leave the hospital, you will likely be prescribed
a high blood pressure medicine.1 You will then have
regular checkups with your doctor to monitor your recovery.
Taking high blood pressure medicine while breast-feeding
There are several commonly used high blood
pressure medicines that have no reported effects on the breast-feeding baby.
These medicines include labetalol and propranolol, which are most commonly
recommended, as well as hydralazine and methyldopa. Nadolol, metoprolol, and
nifedipine are detectable in mothers' milk, but they have no known effects on
the breast-feeding baby.11
Moderate or severe preeclampsia or an eclamptic seizure is
treated with intravenous magnesium sulfate to prevent seizures. For mild
preeclampsia, magnesium sulfate is sometimes used to prevent seizures
(eclampsia). Research has not yet made it clear whether magnesium sulfate is
beneficial or needed for the treatment of mild preeclampsia.12
High blood pressure medicine
Lowering blood pressure with medicine:
Does not prevent preeclampsia from getting
worse, because high blood pressure is only a symptom of the condition, not a
cause.
Can reduce blood flow to the
placenta if blood pressure is lowered too rapidly,
causing problems for the fetus. So medicine is reserved for preventing severely
high blood pressure levels that are potentially life-threatening to you or your
fetus.
Delivery
A vaginal
delivery is usually safest for the mother and is attempted first if she and the
baby are both stable. If preeclampsia is rapidly getting worse or fetal
monitoring suggests that the baby cannot safely handle labor contractions, a
cesarean section (C-section) delivery is
needed.
Ongoing issues
Preeclampsia usually does not cause long-term problems. Healthy habits,
such as regular exercise and eating a healthy diet, may help prevent future
health problems. If you have had preeclampsia, talk to your doctor about what
you can do to stay healthy.
Prevention
If you have chronic
high blood pressure (hypertension), you can lower your
blood pressure before pregnancy by exercising, eating a diet low in sodium and
rich in fruits and vegetables, and staying at a healthy weight. Lowering your
blood pressure reduces your risk of
preeclampsia.
When you are pregnant,
regular checkups are key to early detection and treatment. Prompt treatment is
vital to preventing the development of severe and possibly life-threatening
preeclampsia.
Recent preeclampsia research suggests that calcium
supplements and low-dose aspirin offer a preventive benefit, especially for
high-risk women.
Calcium supplements may reduce the risk of developing preeclampsia and the risk
of having a low-birth-weight baby, particularly among high-risk women who
normally don't get enough calcium.4 Taking a calcium
supplement may also lower the risk of moving from mild to severe
preeclampsia.13 Other experts have found that there is
no benefit from taking calcium.1
But all pregnant women can generally benefit from
taking the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's recommended daily allowance of
1200 mg of calcium each day to keep their
bones healthy.
Low-dose aspirin
(antiplatelet) therapy may be a moderately effective preventive treatment for
women at risk of developing
preeclampsia. Although some experts question how
effective low-dose aspirin is, others assert that high-risk women who take it
regularly as directed do significantly lower their preeclampsia risk.14 Talk to your doctor or nurse-midwife about whether this
treatment is right for you.
Research shows that taking vitamin C or vitamin E supplements does not
help prevent preeclampsia.15, 16
Home Treatment
High blood pressure
If you have ongoing (chronic)
high blood pressure and are taking blood pressure
medicine, talk to your doctor before becoming pregnant (or as soon as you learn
you are pregnant). Some high blood pressure medicines are dangerous to your
fetus.
If you have high blood pressure during pregnancy, take
steps that will help control your blood pressure:
Go to all of your prenatal checkups. It is
important to monitor your blood pressure because a dangerous increase in blood
pressure can occur without symptoms. You may also want to keep track of your
blood pressure readings at home.
If you smoke, quit smoking. This
helps decrease your blood pressure and improve your fetus's growth and
health.
Do not gain an excessive amount of weight during your
pregnancy. Talk to your doctor about how much is healthy for you to
gain.
Get regular mild exercise during pregnancy. Walking or
swimming several times weekly can be healthy for you and your developing fetus.
Reduce stress. Find time to relax, especially if you continue to
work, are parenting small children at home, and/or have a hectic
schedule.
By following
general guidelines for a healthy pregnancy, you can
help optimize your own and your baby's overall health and make sure that you
are both in the best possible shape for handling the challenges of pregnancy,
delivery, and recovery.
Expectant management for preeclampsia
If you develop
signs of
preeclampsia early in pregnancy, your doctor or
nurse-midwife may prescribe something called
expectant management at home, possibly for many weeks.
This may mean you are advised to stop working, reduce your activity level, or
possibly spend a lot of time resting (partial bed rest). Although partial bed
rest is considered reasonable treatment for preeclampsia, its effectiveness is
not proved for treating mild preeclampsia.17 It is
known that strict bed rest may increase your risk of developing a blood clot in
the legs or lungs.
Whether you are required to reduce your
activity or have partial bed rest, expectant management severely limits your
ability to work, remain active, take care of children, and fulfill other
responsibilities. It may be helpful to follow some
tips for dealing with bed rest.
You may be required to monitor your own condition on a
daily basis. If so, you or another person (such as a trained family member or a
visiting nurse) will:
Check your weight. Before checking your weight, you
should empty your bladder, take off your shoes, and wear about the same amount
of clothing each time.
Keep a
written record of your results, including the dates and times you checked. Take
this record with you when you visit your doctor or nurse-midwife.
Control high blood pressure.
Lowering high blood pressure does not prevent preeclampsia from getting worse,
because high blood pressure is only a symptom of the condition, not a cause.
High blood pressure medicine is usually not used unless a pregnant woman's
diastolic blood pressure (the second number) reaches levels of about 105 mm Hg
(millimeters of mercury) and above.1Expectant management is the preferred treatment for
mild high blood pressure during pregnancy.
Prevent seizures. Magnesium sulfate is usually started before delivery and
continued for 24 hours after delivery for women with pregnancy-related seizures
(eclampsia) and those with moderate to severe
preeclampsia.
Speed up fetal lung development. When possible, a corticosteroid (betamethasone or
dexamethasone) is given to the mother prior to a premature birth (up to 34
weeks of gestation). This medicine matures the fetus's lungs over a 24-hour
period, which lowers the risk of breathing problems after birth.
After childbirth: Taking high blood pressure medicine while breast-feeding
There are several
commonly used high blood pressure medicines that have no reported effects on
the breast-feeding baby. These medicines include labetalol and propranolol,
which are most commonly recommended, as well as hydralazine and methyldopa.
Nadolol, metoprolol, and nifedipine are detectable in mothers' milk, but they
have no known effects on the breast-feeding baby.11
Medication Choices
High blood pressure medicines commonly used during
pregnancy include:
Methyldopa (an oral medicine for
controlling high blood pressure during pregnancy).
Hydralazine (an
intravenous medicine for quickly lowering severely
high blood pressure during pregnancy).
Labetalol (an
intravenous medicine for quickly lowering severely high blood pressure in the
hospital, and also an oral medicine for controlling high blood pressure during
pregnancy).
Nifedipine (an oral medicine for
controlling high blood pressure during pregnancy).
Magnesium sulfate is the most common medicine used for
preventing
eclampsia (seizures) during pregnancy.
Steroid medicines such as
betamethasone and dexamethasone may be used to help
the fetus's lungs mature faster. These medicines are often given if preterm
delivery is needed.
What To Think About
There is currently not enough
medical evidence to show which high blood pressure medicine is most effective
for use during pregnancy.
Some high blood pressure medicines are dangerous during pregnancy.10 If you take high blood pressure medicines, talk to your
doctor about the safety of your medicine before you become pregnant or as soon
as you learn you are pregnant. Make sure that your doctor has a complete list
of all medicines that you are taking.
Lowering blood pressure too
much or too fast can reduce blood flow to the placenta, causing problems for
the fetus. So medicine is reserved for preventing severely high blood pressure
levels that may be life-threatening to you or your fetus.
The main treatment for severe
preeclampsia is stabilizing the condition (preventing
seizures with the anticonvulsant medicine magnesium sulfate and controlling
high blood pressure) and delivering the baby. If you have severe preeclampsia
or you have mild to moderate preeclampsia and are close to your due date, your
baby will be delivered. Vaginal delivery is preferred to cesarean
delivery.
Expectant management
Your condition may
be treated with
expectant management (bed rest) either at home or in
the hospital. The purpose of expectant management is to allow more time for
fetal development, for the cervix to become ready for a vaginal delivery, or
both.
Social support
Reduced
activity and worry are difficult parts of having preeclampsia. It often helps
to talk with women who are or have been in the same situation. See the Other
Places to Get Help section of this topic for more information.
Other Places To Get Help
Organizations
American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists
(ACOG)
409 12th Street SW
P.O. Box 96920
Washington, DC 20090-6920
Phone:
(202) 638-5577
E-mail:
resources@acog.org
Web Address:
www.acog.org
American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists
(ACOG) is a nonprofit organization of professionals who provide health care for
women, including teens. The ACOG Resource Center publishes manuals and patient
education materials. The Web publications section of the site has patient
education pamphlets on many women's health topics, including reproductive
health, breast-feeding, violence, and quitting smoking.
American Pregnancy Association
1425 Greenway Drive
Suite 440
Irving, TX 75038
Phone:
1-800-672-2296
Fax:
(972) 550-0800
E-mail:
questions@americanpregnancy.org
Web Address:
www.americanpregnancy.org
The American Pregnancy Association is a national health
organization committed to promoting reproductive and pregnancy wellness through
education, research, advocacy, and community awareness. You can call a
toll-free helpline or use the Web site to request patient education materials.
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
(NHLBI)
P.O. Box 30105
Bethesda, MD 20824-0105
Phone:
(301) 592-8573
Fax:
(240) 629-3246
TDD:
(240) 629-3255
E-mail:
nhlbiinfo@nhlbi.nih.gov
Web Address:
www.nhlbi.nih.gov
The U.S. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
information center offers information and publications about preventing and
treating heart, lung, and blood diseases.
Roberts JM (2004). Pregnancy-related hypertension. In
RK Creasy, R Resnik, eds., Maternal-Fetal Medicine, 5th
ed., pp. 859-899. Philadelphia: Saunders.
Solomon CG, Seely EW (2004). Preeclampsia-Searching
for the cause. New England Journal of Medicine, 350(7):
641-642.
Roberts JM, Cooper DW (2001). Pathogenesis and
genetics of pre-eclampsia. Lancet, 357(9249):
53-56.
Duley L (2005). Pre-eclampsia and hypertension, search date November 2004. Online version of Clinical Evidence (14): 1776-1790.
Cunningham FG, et al. (2005). Maternal physiology. In Williams Obstetrics, 22nd ed., pp. 122-150. New York: McGraw-Hill.
Habli M, Sibai BM (2008). Hypertensive disorders of
pregnancy. In RS Gibbs et al., eds., Danforth's Obstetrics and Gynecology, 10th ed., pp. 257-275. Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams and
Wilkins.
O'Brien TE, et al. (2003). Maternal body mass index
and the risk of preeclampsia: A systematic overview. Epidemiology, 14(3): 368-374.
Skjaerven R, et al. (2002). The interval between
pregnancies and the risk of preeclampsia. New England Journal of Medicine, 346(1): 33-38.
Wiggins DA, Main E (2005). Outcomes of pregnancies achieved by donor egg in vitro fertilization-A comparison with standard in vitro fertilization pregnancies. American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 192(6): 2002-2008.
Cooper WO, et al. (2006). Major congenital malformations after first-trimester exposure to ACE inhibitors. New England Journal of Medicine, 354(23): 2443-2451.
American Academy of Pediatrics (2001). The transfer of
drugs and other chemicals into human milk. Pediatrics,
108(3): 776-789.
Sibai BM (2004). Magnesium sulfate prophylaxis in
preeclampsia: Lessons learned from recent trials. American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 190(6): 1520-1526.
Villar J, et al. (2006). World Health Organization randomized trial of calcium supplementation among low calcium intake pregnant women. American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 194(3): 639-649.
Coomarasamy A, et al. (2003). Aspirin for prevention
of preeclampsia in women with historical risk factors: A systematic review.
Obstetrics and Gynecology, 101(6):
1319-1332.
Poston L, et al. (2006). Vitamin C and vitamin E in pregnant women at risk for pre-eclampsia (VIP trial): Randomised placebo-controlled trial. Lancet, 367(9517): 1145-1154.
Rumbold AR, et al. (2006). Vitamins C and E and the risks of preeclampsia and perinatal complications. New England Journal of Medicine, 354(17): 1796-1806.
Sibai BM (2003). Diagnosis and management of
gestational hypertension and preeclampsia. Obstetrics and Gynecology, 102(1): 191-192.
Other Works Consulted
American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists
(2002). Diagnosis and management of preeclampsia and eclampsia. ACOG Practice
Bulletin No. 33. Obstetrics and Gynecology, 99(1):
159-167.
Duley L, et al. (2001). Antiplatelet drugs for
prevention of pre-eclampsia and its consequences: Systematic review.
BMJ, 322(7282): 329-333.
Credits
Author
Sandy Jocoy, RN
Editor
Kathleen M. Ariss, MS
Associate Editor
Pat Truman, MATC
Primary Medical Reviewer
Sarah Marshall, MD - Family Medicine
Specialist Medical Reviewer
Deborah A. Penava, BA, MD, FRCSC, MPH - Obstetrics and Gynecology
This information does not replace the advice of a doctor. Healthwise disclaims any warranty or liability for your use of this information. Your use of this information means that you agree to the Terms of Use. How this information was developed to help you make better health decisions.
Roberts JM (2004). Pregnancy-related hypertension. In
RK Creasy, R Resnik, eds., Maternal-Fetal Medicine, 5th
ed., pp. 859-899. Philadelphia: Saunders.
Solomon CG, Seely EW (2004). Preeclampsia-Searching
for the cause. New England Journal of Medicine, 350(7):
641-642.
Roberts JM, Cooper DW (2001). Pathogenesis and
genetics of pre-eclampsia. Lancet, 357(9249):
53-56.
Duley L (2005). Pre-eclampsia and hypertension, search date November 2004. Online version of Clinical Evidence (14): 1776-1790.
Cunningham FG, et al. (2005). Maternal physiology. In Williams Obstetrics, 22nd ed., pp. 122-150. New York: McGraw-Hill.
Habli M, Sibai BM (2008). Hypertensive disorders of
pregnancy. In RS Gibbs et al., eds., Danforth's Obstetrics and Gynecology, 10th ed., pp. 257-275. Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams and
Wilkins.
O'Brien TE, et al. (2003). Maternal body mass index
and the risk of preeclampsia: A systematic overview. Epidemiology, 14(3): 368-374.
Skjaerven R, et al. (2002). The interval between
pregnancies and the risk of preeclampsia. New England Journal of Medicine, 346(1): 33-38.
Wiggins DA, Main E (2005). Outcomes of pregnancies achieved by donor egg in vitro fertilization-A comparison with standard in vitro fertilization pregnancies. American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 192(6): 2002-2008.
Cooper WO, et al. (2006). Major congenital malformations after first-trimester exposure to ACE inhibitors. New England Journal of Medicine, 354(23): 2443-2451.
American Academy of Pediatrics (2001). The transfer of
drugs and other chemicals into human milk. Pediatrics,
108(3): 776-789.
Sibai BM (2004). Magnesium sulfate prophylaxis in
preeclampsia: Lessons learned from recent trials. American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 190(6): 1520-1526.
Villar J, et al. (2006). World Health Organization randomized trial of calcium supplementation among low calcium intake pregnant women. American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 194(3): 639-649.
Coomarasamy A, et al. (2003). Aspirin for prevention
of preeclampsia in women with historical risk factors: A systematic review.
Obstetrics and Gynecology, 101(6):
1319-1332.
Poston L, et al. (2006). Vitamin C and vitamin E in pregnant women at risk for pre-eclampsia (VIP trial): Randomised placebo-controlled trial. Lancet, 367(9517): 1145-1154.
Rumbold AR, et al. (2006). Vitamins C and E and the risks of preeclampsia and perinatal complications. New England Journal of Medicine, 354(17): 1796-1806.
Sibai BM (2003). Diagnosis and management of
gestational hypertension and preeclampsia. Obstetrics and Gynecology, 102(1): 191-192.