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232. Adaptation of blood pressure during normotensive pregnancies and pregnancies complicated by hypertension – A systematic review and meta-analysis

Data on blood pressure (BP) adaptation in pregnancy show conflicting results on the occurrence of a mid-pregnancy BP drop. These inconsistent findings may contribute to delayed recognition of maladaptation in women at risk for a hypertensive complicated pregnancy. To meta-analytically describe the p...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Pregnancy hypertension 2018-10, Vol.13, p.S106-S106
Main Authors: de Haas, Sander, Spaanderman, Marc, Mulder, Eva, Schartmann, Niklas, Mohseni, Zenab, van Kuijk, Sander, van Drongelen, Joris, Ghossein-Doha, Chahinda
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Data on blood pressure (BP) adaptation in pregnancy show conflicting results on the occurrence of a mid-pregnancy BP drop. These inconsistent findings may contribute to delayed recognition of maladaptation in women at risk for a hypertensive complicated pregnancy. To meta-analytically describe the pattern of BP adaptation in singleton normotensive pregnancies and hypertensive pregnancies. We performeda systematic review and meta-analysis using PubMed and Embase. Studies included, needed to report a reference non-pregnant measurement. Mean differences between pregnant and reference measurements were calculated for systolic BP (SBP) and diastolic BP (DBP) in predefined gestational intervals using a random-effects model. In total, 110 studies were included (23079 BP readings). In normotensive pregnancy, both SBP and DBP started to decrease early in pregnancy, reaching their maximum reduction of −3.3% (−3.7 mmHg, (95% CI, −5.1 to −2.3)) and −5.6% (−3.9 mmHg, (95% CI, −4.8 to −3.0)) respectively in the late second trimester. In the third trimester, SBP and DBP gradually increased to reference values. In hypertensive complicated pregnancies, SBP did not decrease, while DBP initially decreased with −7.2% (−5.8 mmHg, (95% CI, −8.3 to −3.4)) in the early second trimester. From the second half of pregnancy onwards, BP increased to values higher than reference. SBP and DBP increased with 35% (38.2 mmHg, (95% CI, 27.3–49.2)) and 37% (26.1 mmHg, (95% CI, 18.4–33.8)) respectively in the hypertensive group, statistically significantly higher than normotensive pregnancies (p 
ISSN:2210-7789
2210-7797
DOI:10.1016/j.preghy.2018.08.314