Hypertension in pregnancy

From IDWiki

Background

Definition

  • SBP ≥140 or DBP ≥90, with severe ≥160/110
  • Use the muffling of Karotkoff sounds rather than disappearance

Classification

  • Pre-existing or chronic hypertension (<20 weeks; 1%), either primary or secondary
    • Often the first time they're seeing a doctor for blood pressure
    • Consider if there is an underlying secondary cause
    • Can have superimposed preeclampsia in 15-20% of these patients
      • Highest risk in patients who started hypertensive and have been trending upwards over the first and second trimesters
  • Gestational (>20 weeks; 5%)
    • Mild
    • Severe: BP ≥160/110
  • Preeclampsia (1-2%): also have proteinuria or end-organ damage
  • Other
    • Transient
    • Masked
    • White coat

Pathophysiology

  • BP in pregnancy naturally decreases to a nadir at 20 weeks

Epidemiology

  • Affects 8% of all pregnancies
    • Pre-existing in 1%
    • Gestational in 5-6%
    • Preeclampsia in 1-2%
    • Other
  • A major cause of maternal and perinatal morbidity and mortality
    • Preeclampsia/eclampsia is the second leading direct cause of maternal mortality in developed world

Differential Diagnosis

  • Spurious or transient (white coat hypertension)
  • Pre-existing (especially if in first trimester)
  • Gestational (>20 weeks gestation)
    • No proteinuria
      • Mild gestational hypertension
        • Presents late ≥37 weeks
        • Outcomes are fine
      • Severe gestational hypertension
        • Very high risk for preeclampsia within 5 weeks if presents <34 weeks
    • Proteinuria or end-organ dysfunction (preeclampsia)
      • Two-stage model
      • Two leading theories
        • Excessive shedding of syncitiotrophoblasts into maternal circulation in women with preeclampsia, which presents late and mildly
        • Increased concentrations of soluble receptor for angiogenic factors (VEGF agonists, including s-Flt and PLGF)

Management

Chronic Hypertension

  • First-line antihypertensives: labetalol, methyldopa, nifedipine, hydralazine
  • Second-line is hydrochlorothiazide, but it has a theoretical risk of decreasing placental perfusion
  • Third-line includes clonidine, prazosin
  • Fourth-line: nitrates (short term use)
  • Antihypertensives often need to be titrated throughout pregnancy
  • Avoid: ACEi and ARBs
    • ACE inhibitors cause fetal anuria and oligohydramnius in T2-3
      • Unclear teratogenicity in T1
    • ARBs may be worse
    • Stop these medications when patient starts trying to conceive
  • Target
    • No comorbidities: 130-155/80-105
    • With comorbidities 130-139/80-89

Preeclampsia

  • Prevention
    • ASA 75-100mg daily prior to 16 weeks
    • Calcium 1000mg daily
  • Severe HTN >160/109
    • Treat if symptomatic, monitor if not
    • Target <155/95 for maternal safety while allowing placental perfusion to continue
  • Labetalol, nifedipine, hydralazine IV
  • MgSO4 4-6g in 100mL D5W over 15 minutes, then 1-2g/h for 24h
    • Beware toxicity, especially if oliguric
      • CNS depression, decreased reflexes
      • Respiratory depression, bradycardia, hypotension
  • Deliver if cannot control blood pressure, they develop symptoms, of they have evidence of end-organ involvement
  • Postpartum: AVOID NSAIDs

Postpartum

Further Reading