Hermida R C, Ayala D E, Iglesias M
Bioengineering and Chronobiology Laboratories, University of Vigo, Campus Universitario, Vigo, Spain.
Hypertension. 2001 Sep;38(3 Pt 2):736-41. doi: 10.1161/01.hyp.38.3.736.
With the aim of describing the predictable pattern of blood pressure (BP) variability during gestation, we analyzed 2430 BP series systematically sampled by ambulatory monitoring for 48 consecutive hours every 4 weeks from the first obstetric visit (usually within the first trimester of pregnancy) until delivery in 235 normotensive women, 128 women who developed gestational hypertension, and 40 women who had a final diagnosis of preeclampsia. The pattern of variation along gestation of the 24-hour means of BP and heart rate was established for each group of women by polynomial regression analysis. For normotensive women, results indicate a steady decrease in BP up to 20 weeks of pregnancy, followed by an increase in BP up to the day of delivery, with an average 8% BP increase between the middle of gestation and delivery. In complicated pregnancies, BP is stable until the 22nd week of gestation and then increases linearly for the remainder of the pregnancy. Complicated pregnancies are characterized by a 9% and 13% increase in systolic and diastolic BPs, respectively, during the second half of gestation. Results also indicate that during the first half of pregnancy, systolic but not diastolic BP is slightly elevated in women who developed preeclampsia compared with those who developed gestational hypertension. During the second half of gestation, the linear trend of increasing BP for women who developed preeclampsia has a significantly higher slope than the trend for women with gestational hypertension. For both healthy and complicated pregnancies, heart rate increases until the end of the second trimester and slightly decreases thereafter. This study of women systematically sampled by 48-hour ambulatory BP monitoring throughout gestation confirms the predictable pregnancy-associated variability in BP and provides proper information for the establishment of reference limits for BP to be used in the early diagnosis of hypertensive complications in pregnancy. Those limits should be developed as a function of gestational age, taking into account the trends in BP throughout pregnancy demonstrated here.
为了描述妊娠期血压(BP)变化的可预测模式,我们分析了2430个血压系列,这些数据是通过动态监测每4周系统采样一次,每次连续48小时,从首次产科就诊(通常在妊娠早期)直至分娩,涉及235名血压正常的女性、128名发生妊娠期高血压的女性以及40名最终诊断为子痫前期的女性。通过多项式回归分析,为每组女性确定了24小时平均血压和心率随妊娠的变化模式。对于血压正常的女性,结果表明,妊娠20周前血压稳步下降,随后直至分娩日血压上升,妊娠中期至分娩期间血压平均上升8%。在复杂妊娠中,血压在妊娠22周前保持稳定,然后在妊娠剩余时间呈线性上升。复杂妊娠的特点是在妊娠后半期收缩压和舒张压分别上升9%和13%。结果还表明,在妊娠前半期,与发生妊娠期高血压的女性相比,发生子痫前期的女性收缩压略有升高,但舒张压没有升高。在妊娠后半期,发生子痫前期的女性血压上升的线性趋势斜率明显高于妊娠期高血压女性的趋势。对于健康妊娠和复杂妊娠,心率在妊娠中期结束前上升,此后略有下降。这项通过对整个妊娠期进行48小时动态血压监测系统采样的女性研究,证实了与妊娠相关的血压变化具有可预测性,并为建立用于妊娠高血压并发症早期诊断的血压参考限值提供了适当信息。这些限值应根据胎龄制定,同时考虑到此处所示的整个妊娠期间的血压趋势。