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Preterm delivery, low birth weight and neonatal risk in pregnant women with high blood pressure

Pregnant women with chronic hypertension (high blood pressure) are highly likely to suffer from adverse pregnancy outcomes such as preterm delivery, low birth weight and neonatal death, which highlights a need for heightened surveillance, suggests a paper published in BMJ today.


Chronic hypertension complicates between 1-5% of pregnancies, and the problem may be increasing because of changes in the antenatal population.

A recent study in the US suggests the prevalence of chronic hypertension increased from 1995-1996 to 2007-2008, after adjustment for maternal age. Obesity and metabolism are likely to contribute and therefore the number of women entering pregnancy with chronic hypertension is set to rise.

Researchers from King's College London carried out a study to assess the strength of evidence linking chronic hypertension with poor . They combined data from studies from 55 studies done in 25 countries.

The researchers looked at the following outcomes:  (delivery before 37 weeks' gestation);  (below 2500g); perinatal death (fetal death after 20 weeks' gestation including stillbirth and  up to one month) and admission to neonatal intensive care or special care baby units.

The relative risk of pre-eclampsia (a condition in pregnancy characterised by ) in women with chronic hypertension was on average nearly eight times higher than pre-eclampsia in non-hypertensive women. All adverse neonatal outcomes were at least twice as likely to occur, compared with the general population.

http://medicalxpress.com/news/2014-04-preterm-delivery-birth-weight-neonatal.html

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