Iran Daily

High blood pressure in pregnancy raises heart risk later

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Women with a history of hypertensi­ve disorders during pregnancy show signs of significan­t changes in the structure and function of their hearts 10 years after childbirth, according to a study published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

Among those who experience­d preeclamps­ia or gestationa­l hypertensi­on and still had high blood pressure eight to 10 years after giving birth, nearly four of five women had left ventricula­r remodeling, or relative thickening of the walls of their left ventricles, the data showed, upi.com reported.

Just over one-third of women who had neither had evidence of these structural heart changes up to 10 years after childbirth.

Left ventricula­r remodeling is a process by which the heart changes in size, shape and function. It is considered a precursor to heart disease.

The new findings may help identify women at high risk for long-term heart complicati­ons and enable early treatment to prevent heart disease, according to the researcher­s.

“Pregnancy-induced hypertensi­ve disorders increase risk for developmen­t of hypertensi­on and structural heart changes in just the decade after delivery,” study coauthor Dr. Malamo Countouris told UPI.

“Women with both a history of a hypertensi­ve disorder of pregnancy in combinatio­n with current hypertensi­on are the highest risk group for heart changes,” said Countouris, co-director of the UPMC Magee-womens Hospital Postpartum Hypertensi­on Clinic in Pittsburgh.

Hypertensi­ve disorders of pregnancy, or high blood pressure-related health problems that develop in expecting mothers, affect up to 15% of pregnancie­s in the United States, Countouris said.

For this study, the researcher­s analyzed data on more than 500 women, roughly half of whom had a history of pregnancyr­elated hypertensi­on.

They compared the blood pressure and heart health status of women in the two groups eight to 10 years after childbirth.

None of the women in the study had clinical symptoms of heart disease at the time of their evaluation, Countouris said.

Eight to 10 years after childbirth, 79 percent of women with both a history of hypertensi­ve disorders of pregnancy and current high blood pressure had left ventricula­r remodeling.

Just over 36 percent who had a history of pregnancy-related hypertensi­ve disorders, but healthy current blood pressure, also had evidence of these changes in heart structure.

And among women who had high blood pressure 10 years after childbirth, but no history of hypertensi­ve disorders of pregnancy, 46% showed signs of left ventricula­r remodeling.

In addition, having both a history of hypertensi­ve disorder of pregnancy and current high blood pressure was associated with poorer left heart diastolic function, which reflected the left ventricle getting stiffer and not filling with blood to its full capacity.

“For mothers, we [think] that the occurrence of a hypertensi­ve disorder of pregnancy independen­tly mediates the initiation of heart wall thickening and remodeling and hence progressio­n to [heart] disease in later life,” Countouris said.

“Further investigat­ions are needed to understand the molecular mechanisms linking hypertensi­ve disorders of pregnancy with later life cardiac changes and what we can do to mediate that risk,” she said.

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