Magee L A
Children's and Women's Health Centre of British Columbia, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
Drug Saf. 2001;24(6):457-74. doi: 10.2165/00002018-200124060-00004.
Hypertension is found among 1 to 6% of young women. Treatment aims to decrease cardiovascular risk, the magnitude of which is less dependent on the absolute level of blood pressure (BP) than on associated cardiovascular risk factors, hypertension-related target organ damage and/or concomitant disease. Lifestyle modifications are recommended for all hypertensive individuals. The threshold of BP at which antihypertensive therapy should be initiated is based on absolute cardiovascular risk. Most young women are at low risk and not in need of antihypertensive therapy. All antihypertensive agents appear to be equally efficacious; choice depends on personal preference, social circumstances and an agent's effect on cardiovascular risk factors, target organ damage and/or concomitant disease. Although most agents are appropriate for, and tolerated well by, young women, another consideration remains that of pregnancy, 50% of which are unplanned. A clinician must be aware of a woman's method of contraception and the potential of an antihypertensive agent to cause birth defects following inadvertent exposure in early pregnancy. Conversely, if an oral contraceptive is effective and well tolerated, but the woman's BP becomes mildly elevated, continuing the contraceptive and initiating antihypertensive treatment may not be contraindicated, especially if the ability to plan pregnancy is important (e.g. in type 1 diabetes mellitus). No commonly used antihypertensive is known to be teratogenic, although ACE inhibitors and angiotensin receptor antagonists should be discontinued, and any antihypertensive drugs should be continued in pregnancy only if anticipated benefits outweigh potential reproductive risk(s). The hypertensive disorders of pregnancy complicate 5 to 10% of pregnancies and are a leading cause of maternal and perinatal mortality and morbidity. Treatment aims to improve pregnancy outcome. There is consensus that severe maternal hypertension (systolic BP > or = 170mm Hg and/or diastolic BP > or = 110mm Hg) should be treated immediately to avoid maternal stroke, death and, possibly, eclampsia. Parenteral hydralazine may be associated with a higher risk of maternal hypotension, and intravenous labetalol with neonatal bradycardia. There is no consensus as to whether mild-to-moderate hypertension in pregnancy should be treated: the risks of transient severe hypertension, antenatal hospitalisation, proteinuria at delivery and neonatal respiratory distress syndrome may be decreased by therapy, but intrauterine fetal growth may also be impaired, particularly by atenolol. Methyldopa and other beta-blockers have been used most extensively. Reporting bias and the uncertainty of outcomes as defined warrant cautious interpretation of these findings and preclude treatment recommendations.
1%至6%的年轻女性患有高血压。治疗旨在降低心血管风险,这种风险的程度与其说是取决于血压(BP)的绝对水平,不如说是取决于相关的心血管危险因素、高血压相关的靶器官损害和/或伴随疾病。建议所有高血压患者进行生活方式调整。启动抗高血压治疗的血压阈值基于绝对心血管风险。大多数年轻女性风险较低,不需要抗高血压治疗。所有抗高血压药物似乎疗效相同;选择取决于个人偏好、社会情况以及药物对心血管危险因素、靶器官损害和/或伴随疾病的影响。虽然大多数药物适用于年轻女性且耐受性良好,但另一个需要考虑的因素是怀孕,其中50%是意外怀孕。临床医生必须了解女性的避孕方法以及抗高血压药物在怀孕早期意外接触后导致出生缺陷的可能性。相反,如果口服避孕药有效且耐受性良好,但女性血压轻度升高,继续使用避孕药并开始抗高血压治疗可能并非禁忌,特别是在计划怀孕的能力很重要的情况下(例如1型糖尿病)。虽然已知没有常用的抗高血压药物具有致畸性,但应停用血管紧张素转换酶(ACE)抑制剂和血管紧张素受体拮抗剂,并且只有在预期益处超过潜在生殖风险时,任何抗高血压药物才可在怀孕期间继续使用。妊娠高血压疾病使5%至10%的妊娠复杂化,是孕产妇和围产期死亡及发病的主要原因。治疗旨在改善妊娠结局。人们一致认为,严重的孕产妇高血压(收缩压≥170mmHg和/或舒张压≥110mmHg)应立即治疗,以避免孕产妇中风、死亡以及可能的子痫。胃肠外使用肼屈嗪可能与孕产妇低血压风险较高有关,静脉注射拉贝洛尔可能与新生儿心动过缓有关。对于妊娠期间轻度至中度高血压是否应治疗尚无共识:治疗可能会降低短暂性严重高血压、产前住院、分娩时蛋白尿和新生儿呼吸窘迫综合征的风险,但也可能损害子宫内胎儿的生长,尤其是阿替洛尔。甲基多巴和其他β受体阻滞剂使用最为广泛。报告偏倚以及所定义结局的不确定性使得对这些发现的解读需谨慎,也无法给出治疗建议。