Hypertension in Pregnancy.............pptx

AhmedKitaw1 9 views 25 slides Jul 10, 2024
Slide 1
Slide 1 of 25
Slide 1
1
Slide 2
2
Slide 3
3
Slide 4
4
Slide 5
5
Slide 6
6
Slide 7
7
Slide 8
8
Slide 9
9
Slide 10
10
Slide 11
11
Slide 12
12
Slide 13
13
Slide 14
14
Slide 15
15
Slide 16
16
Slide 17
17
Slide 18
18
Slide 19
19
Slide 20
20
Slide 21
21
Slide 22
22
Slide 23
23
Slide 24
24
Slide 25
25

About This Presentation

Tt


Slide Content

Hypertension in Pregnancy Dapinderjit Gill Ross University MS3

Hypertension Disorders in Pregnancy Gestational HTN Transient HTN of pregnancy Preeclampsia Mild Severe Eclampsia Chronic HTN preceding pregnancy Chronic HTN with superimposed pregnancy-induced hypertension Superimposed preeclampsia Superimposed eclampsia Classification of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists

Gestational Hypertension

Gestational HTN sustained systolic blood pressure at or above 140mmHg , or a diastolic blood pressure of 90mmHg or greater i ncrease in BP must be present on at least two separate occasions, 6 hours or more apart HTN in late pregnancy ( >20 weeks gestation) in the absence of other findings suggestive of preeclampsia i f BP returns to baseline by 12 weeks postpartum = dx. of Transient hypertension of pregnancy

Gestational HTN 5-10% of pregnancies that proceed beyond 1 st trimester develop gestational HTN i ncreased incidence of up to 30% in multiple gestation 15-25% of women initially diagnosed with gestational HTN develop preeclampsia Earlier onset of gestational HTN are more likely to progress to preeclampsia

Pathophysiology C hanges seen in patients Cardiovascular effects Elevated BP Increased cardiac output Hematologic effects Third spacing of fluid due to increased blood pressure and decreased plasma oncotic pressure Renal effects Atheroscleroticlike changes in renal vessels (glomerular endotheliosis )  decreased glomerular filtration rate and proteinuria Uric acid filtration is decreased

Pathophysiology C hanges seen in patients Neurologic effects Hyperreflexia /hypersensitivity (does not correlate with severity of disease) In severe cases, grand mal seizures Pulmonary effects Pulmonary edema may occur due to decreased colloid oncotic pressure Fetal effects (severe gestational HTN) Vasospasm  Decreased intermittent placental perfusion  IUGR, oligohydramnios , low birth weight

Pathophysiology Mechanisms Uterine vascular changes Trophoblastic-mediated vascular changes  decreased musculature in spiral arterioles  development of low resistance, low pressure, high-flow system Inadequate maternal v ascular response Endothelial damage is also noted within the vessels Hemostatic changes Increased PLT activation with increased endothelial fibronectin and decreased antithrombin III and alpha-2-antiplasmin  further endothelial damage is thought to promote further vasospasm

Pathophysiology Mechanisms Changes in prostanoids During pregnancy, both PGI 2 (vasodilation and decreased PLT aggregation) and TXA 2 (vasoconstriction and PLT aggregation) are increased with balance favored to PGI 2 In preeclampsia, TXA 2 is favored Changes in endothelium-derived factors Decrease in Nitric oxide  promoting vasoconstriction

Gestational HTN Mild: outpatient with weekly visits, bed rest Antihypertensive therapy: Indicated if diastolic pressure is repeatedly above 110mmHg Hydralazine ( Apresoline ) 5mg increments IV until acceptable BP is obtained (diastolic pressure to 90-100mmHg range) Other medications that can be used in pregnancy (oral): methyldopa 250mg BID/TID max 3g/day Labetalol 100mg max 2400mg/day Nifedipine 30-60mg max 120mg/day Magnesium sulfate in severe gestational HTN for seizure prophylaxis

Chronic Hypertension

Chronic HTN HTN present before 20 th week of gestation or beyond 6 weeks postpartum (>12 weeks postpartum from uptodate.com ) 15% of gestational HTN cases go on to develop chronic HTN 25% risk of developing superimposed preeclampsia or eclampsia Close monitoring of maternal BP and follow appropriate fetal growth and well-being Pt. should be encouraged to increase the amount of time she rests

Preeclampsia

Preeclampsia Development of HTN with proteinuria induced by pregnancy generally in the second half of gestation More frequent at the extremes of reproductive years More common in women who have not carried a previous pregnancy beyond 20 weeks o ld women or young lady?

Preeclampsia Mild: BP: systolic > 140mmHg and/or diastolic > 90mmHg Proteinuria: > 300mg on 24h collection of +1 on single sample Severe: BP: systolic > 160-180mmHg and/or diastolic > 110mmHg Proteinuria: > 5g on 24h collection or +2 on single sample Multisystem alterations: cerebral or visual disturbances, oliguria, pulmonary edema, cyanosis, epigastric or right upper quadrant pain, thrombocytopenia

Preeclampsia

Preeclampsia Mild preeclampsia I f immature fetus  bed rest mainly in lateral decubitus position HTN therapy if needed Severe preeclampsia Magnesium sulfate 4g loading dose with 1-3g/ hr infusion rate Antihypertensive therapy Induction or cesarean delivery fetal pulmonary maturity depending on gestational age should be considered (>=34weeks)

Eclampsia

Eclampsia a ddition of convulsions in a woman with preeclampsia o ccurs in 0.5-4% of deliveries m ost cases occur within 24h of delivery with about 3% of cases diagnosed between 2-10 days postpartum 25% have eclamptic seizures before labour , 50% during labour , and 25% after delivery

Eclampsia Anticonvulsant therapy Diazepam or similar drugs Magnesium sulfate to prevent further seizures Maintain adequate airway, oxygenation, restraining gently as needed and inserting a padded tongue blade

HELLP Syndrome

HELLP Syndrome HTN patients with hemolysis ( H ), elevated liver enzymes (EL), low platelet count (LP) 4-12% of pt. with severe preeclampsia and eclampsia develop HELLP syndrome f irst sx . o ften missed: nausea, emesis, and non-specific viral-like syndrome HELLP!

HELLP Syndrome Treatment: c ardiovascular stabilization, correction of coagulation abnormalities, and delivery PLT transfusion before or after delivery if PLT count is <20,000/mm 3 (advised at <50,000/mm 3 before cesarean) <32 weeks gestation; steroid therapy may help stabilize maternal PLT count

Thank You!

References Beckmann, Charles R.B., Ling, Frank W., Smith, Roger P., Barzansky , Barbara M., Herbert, William N.P., Laube , Douglas W. “Obstetrics and Gynecology”. 5 th edition Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. pp. 188-196 Magloire , Lissa etc. “Gestational Hypertension”. May 2011.< uptodate.com > August, Phyllis et. al. “Management of hypertension in pregnancy and postpartum women”. May 2011 < uptodate.com >
Tags