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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (hypertension)
170,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The course of preeclamptic/eclamptic patients may be complicated by HELLP syndrome, a syndrome of intravascular hemolysis (H), elevated liver enzymes (EL) and low platelet count (LP). These patients typically present at early third trimester with epigastric or right upper quadrant pain, nausea and vomiting. They may present without the clinical signs of preeclampsia (hypertension and proteinuria or edema), thus an initial wrong nonobstetric diagnosis is not uncommon. The most frequent maternal complication is intravascular coagulopathy (30%). Placental abruption and acute renal failure are also common. Ten cases of maternal deaths were reported among 295 cases reviewed in the English language literature, while the perinatal mortality rate was 226/1000. The grave prognosis for mother and fetus warrants physician awareness in order to accomplish early diagnosis and proper management. This paper is a review of the literature in English.
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PMID:HELLP syndrome--a syndrome of hemolysis, elevated liver enzymes and low platelet count--complicating preeclampsia-eclampsia. 168 23

In a prospective clinical study the safety of two hydroxyethylstarch preparations (HES steril 10%, Fresenius AG, Oberursel = HES-A; Haemufusin, Kabi-Pfrimmer, Erlangen = HES-B) were assessed. In 60 patients with fetal growth retardation and/or gestational hypertension, hematocrit, aPTT, factor VIIIR: Ag, fibrinogen, uric acid, cord blood hemoglobin, hematocrit, pH-value and the fetal/maternal hydroxyethylstarch concentration before and after eight (HES-B) or nine (HES-A) days of treatment were monitored. 500 ml HES-A (n = 36) or HES-B (n = 24) together with the same volume electrolyte solution, were infused daily. Both substances lowered significantly the maternal and fetal hematocrit. Histopathological changes of placenta (trophoblast cells and stroma) taking place after the infusion of HES-A or HES-B were depicted by light microscopy. Administration of HES-A or HES-B was associated with lower values of factor VIIIR: Ag and a prolongation of aPTT, but only HES-B demonstrated a significant effect (31% vs. 12%, p less than 0.01). We observed in 4 (16.7%) cases severe uterine bleeding complications and one woman (4.2%) with abruptio placentae in the group HES-B. Light microscopy shows vacuoled trophoblast and stroma cells after HES infusions. The marked vacuolisation of the placenta after HES-B is due to differences in the physicochemical characteristics of HES-A and HES-B. For this reason, we prefer to administer HES-A in the dilution treatment of patients with placental insufficiency.
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PMID:[Accumulation of two different hydroxyethyl starch preparations in the placenta after hemodilution in patients with fetal intrauterine growth retardation or pregnancy hypertension]. 172 79

The aim of this study was to assess any changes in cause-specific fetal death rates in the nonreferred population of a tertiary care unit. The fetal death rate (per 1000 births) among 88,651 births diminished from 11.5 in the 1960s to 5.1 in the 1980s. Fetal death due to intrapartum asphyxia and Rh isoimmunization has almost disappeared. Toxemia and diabetes continue to make similar and small contributions to fetal death rates. There has been a significant decline in unexplained antepartum fetal deaths and in those caused by fetal growth retardation, but no significant change in the death rate due to intrauterine infection or abruptio placentae. During the 1960s, the risk of fetal death was increased in women with hypertension, diabetes, or a history of stillbirth; during the 1980s, only women with a history of insulin-dependent diabetes were at risk. Improved application of current knowledge may help decrease the fetal death rate caused by fetal growth retardation. Reduction in deaths due to abruptio placentae, intrauterine infections, or lethal malformations, as well as unexplained antepartum deaths, appears to depend on better understanding of the etiology of these disorders.
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PMID:The changing pattern of fetal death, 1961-1988. 172 82

Pregnancy-induced hypertension is a disorder of unknown etiology unique to pregnant women. Classic clinical manifestations include hypertension, proteinuria, and edema. Early recognition and proper management of this disease may serve to avoid serious maternal complications. Ultimate maternal treatment depends on delivery of the fetus and placenta. Advanced stages of this disease result in multi-organ system dysfunction that may be life-threatening to the mother and her fetus. Such maternal complications of PIH include severe hypertension, oliguria or anuria, HELLP syndrome, eclamptic seizures, liver rupture, pulmonary edema, cerebral edema, and abruptio placentae. A multidisciplinary approach of the critical care team often will effect a reduction in maternal morbidity and mortality.
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PMID:Management of severe preeclampsia and eclampsia. 174 3

We investigated the importance of maternal hypertension and cigarette smoking, and their interaction, as risk factors for abruptio placentae, using Massachusetts birth certificate data for 1987-1988. We used multiple logistic regression procedures to model data from 943 abruptio placentae cases and 10,648 randomly selected births. Risk of abruption was associated with a history of chronic hypertension (adjusted OR = 2.3, 95% CI: 1.5-3.5) and cigarette smoking during pregnancy (adjusted OR = 1.7, 95% CI: 1.5-2.0). There was also evidence of interaction between chronic hypertension and cigarette smoking. The hypoxemia that results from exposure to cigarette smoke and the alterations in uterine blood flow that result from hypertension may lead to placental lesions that cause abruption.
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PMID:Chronic hypertension, cigarette smoking, and abruptio placentae. 179 Jan 99

Infertility, spontaneous abortions and trisomic anomalies increase with maternal age, as do ectopic pregnancy, low birth weight, macrosomia, abruptio placentae and labor dysfunction. However, those phenomena are multifactorial in origin and cannot be ascribed solely to advancing age. Older pregnant women are also at increased risk for diabetes and hypertension. Whereas the older gravida is at increased risk for maternal mortality and morbidity and for fetal and infant mortality, those problems are explainable in large part by coexisting medical complications. The healthy older pregnant woman who receives appropriate prepregnancy counseling and up-to-date perinatal care can achieve results comparable to those achieved by younger ones.
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PMID:Reproduction in the older gravida. A literature review. 181 94

Pregnancies complicated by chronic hypertension are at increased risk for the development of superimposed preeclampsia, abruptio placentae, and poor perinatal outcome. The frequency of these complications is particularly increased in patients with severe hypertension and those with preexisting cardiovascular and renal disease. Such women should receive appropriate antihypertensive therapy and frequent evaluations of maternal and fetal well-being. In contrast, in patients with mild essential chronic hypertension, the maternal and perinatal benefits from antihypertensive medications are highly controversial. A review of the literature revealed two placebo-controlled studies, four trials comparing treatment versus no medication, and three comparisons of methyldopa and oxprenolol. In only one of these studies were subjects randomized in the first trimester. No differences in pregnancy outcome were found with the use of antihypertensive drugs. Evaluation of the woman with chronic hypertension who is considering pregnancy should begin before conception to establish the cause and severity of the hypertension. Appropriate management should include frequent evaluation of maternal and fetal well-being; antihypertensive medications may be useful in patients with severe disease as well as in those with target organ involvement.
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PMID:Diagnosis and management of chronic hypertension in pregnancy. 173 33

We present a case in which electroconvulsive therapy was performed repeatedly in pregnancy because of severe depression with psychotic features and failure of chemical treatment. Each electroconvulsive treatment was immediately followed by uterine contractions and active uterine bleeding, possibly representing recurrent abruptio placentae occurring in association with the treatment. Transient acute episodes of maternal hypertension between 180/90 and 190/100 mm Hg, documented within minutes after application of each electroconvulsive treatment, might explain the abruptio placentae manifested by active uterine bleeding and uterine hyperstimulation.
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PMID:Recurrent mild abruptio placentae occurring immediately after repeated electroconvulsive therapy in pregnancy. 189 92

A detailed analysis of 854 perinatal deaths according to both fetal and obstetric cause is presented. The ratio of stillbirths to neonatal deaths was 2.3:1. Almost 25% occurred in unbooked mothers. The major problems identified were preterm labour, unexplained stillbirth, abruptio placentae, infection, and protein-uric hypertension.
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PMID:The causes of perinatal deaths in the greater Cape Town area. A 12-month survey. 173 15

Premature separation of the normally implanted placenta is a serious complication of pregnancy and a leading cause of maternal and perinatal morbidity and mortality. Using data from the National Hospital Discharge Survey, we estimated rates of abruptio placentae in the United States for the years 1979-1987 and examined the association of this condition with several demographic risk factors and coexisting obstetric conditions. In 1987, the national rate was 11.5 cases per 1000 deliveries. The rate of abruptio placentae increased significantly between the years 1979-1987 among women of all racial groups. The increase in the rate of placental abruption occurred mainly among women under the age of 25, unmarried women, and women on Medicaid compared with those who had private insurance. Women with placental abruption were 54 times more likely to have coagulopathies and 11 times more likely to have stillbirths than those without placental abruption. Twin gestations, preterm premature rupture of membranes, chorioamnionitis, chronic hypertension, and preeclampsia/eclampsia were also associated with placental abruption. Although the cause for the increase in the incidence of abruptio placentae is not known, most of the increase occurred among women likely to be financially and socially disadvantaged.
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PMID:National trends in the incidence of abruptio placentae, 1979-1987. 194 12


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