4.5 Article

Maternal cardiovascular changes from pre-pregnancy to very early pregnancy

Journal

JOURNAL OF HYPERTENSION
Volume 30, Issue 11, Pages 2168-2172

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/HJH.0b013e3283588189

Keywords

augmentation index; blood pressure; maternal haemodynamics; pregnancy

Funding

  1. University of Cambridge
  2. Evelyn Trust
  3. Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre (NIHR)
  4. British Heart Foundation [FS/12/8/29377] Funding Source: researchfish

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Objective: Our aim was to assess changes in maternal cardiovascular haemodynamics, including central blood pressure (BP), wave reflections and aortic stiffness, from pre-pregnancy to very early pregnancy. Methods: Fifty-six healthy nulliparous or women with previous uncomplicated pregnancy were studied prior to conception and in very early pregnancy. Assessments of brachial and central BPs, pulse wave reflection quantified by augmentation index (Alx), aortic stiffness using carotid femoral pulse wave velocity (aPWV) and cardiac output (CO) were performed. Results: Pregnancy measurements were obtained at median gestational age of 6.3 weeks [interquartile range (IQR) 6-6.5 weeks] from the last menstrual period. Whilst heart rate (HR) increased from 67 +/- 10 to 71 +/- 10 bpm. (P=0.001), brachial SBP, DBP and central SBP were all lower than the pre-pregnancy values (109 +/- 10 to 104 +/- 7mmHg, 72 +/- 8 to 65 +/- 6mmHg and 99 +/- 10 to 92 +/- 7mmHg, respectively; P<0.001 for all). Alx adjusted for HR fell (19 +/- 10 to 13 +/- 9%; P=0.001) as did peripheral vascular resistance (PVR; 1234 +/- 229 to 1128 +/- 280 dynes/s/cm(5); P=0.003). aPWV adjusted for mean arterial pressure (MAP) was unchanged (5.3 +/- 0.6 to 5.1 +/- 0.6m/s; P=0.2). Conclusion: Significant changes occur in brachial and central BP, Alx and PVR in successful, ongoing pregnancies, by about 6-7 weeks gestation; much earlier than has hitherto been assumed. Using late first trimester data as 'baseline' cannot be relied on to estimate the extent of cardiovascular changes in normal pregnancy. Future studies of cardiovascular changes in pregnancy should, therefore, have a pre-pregnancy starting point.

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