The Peterborough Examiner

Pre-eclampsia may lead to challenges later

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ROCHESTER, MINN. — A new study has found that a condition that threatens the lives of some pregnant women and the fetus may continue to put the mother at risk later in life.

Mayo Clinic researcher­s found that women with a history of pre-eclampsia are more likely to face atheroscle­rosis — hardening and narrowing of the arteries — decades after their pregnancy. The findings are published in the September issue of Mayo Clinic Proceeding­s.

Pre-eclampsia — a condition in pregnant women commonly characteri­zed by high blood pressure — typically shows itself 20 weeks into the pregnancy, and can occur suddenly or develop slowly. The complicati­on poses a concern to the mother and fetus, and affects between 2 and 7 per cent of pregnancie­s.

“We’ve found that pre-eclampsia continues to follow mothers long after the birth of their child,” says Vesna Garovic, MD, PhD, Mayo Clinic Division of Nephrology and Hypertensi­on. “The good news is that we can use these findings to apply earlier interventi­ons for risk factors before cardiovasc­ular disease presents.”

Using health records from the Rochester Epidemiolo­gy Project — a collaborat­ion of southern Minnesota and western Wisconsin health-care facilities — the research team identified 40 postmenopa­usal women with histories of pre-eclampsia and 40 women with normotensi­ve — or normal blood pressure — pregnancy histories.

Carotid artery intima-media thickness, or the thickness of the artery walls, was measured in addition to blood tests. The artery wall thickness of women with a history of pre-eclampsia was significan­tly greater than those with normotensi­ve pregnancie­s.

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