Morris Erin A, Hale Sarah A, Badger Gary J, Magness Ronald R, Bernstein Ira M
Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Reproductive Sciences, University of Vermont College of Medicine, Burlington, VT.
Department of Medical Biostatistics, University of Vermont College of Medicine, Burlington, VT.
Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2015 May;212(5):633.e1-6. doi: 10.1016/j.ajog.2015.01.005. Epub 2015 Jan 7.
Pregnancy induces rapid, progressive, and substantial changes to the cardiovascular system. The low recurrence risk of preeclampsia, despite familial predisposition, suggests an adaptation associated with pregnancy that attenuates the risk for subsequent preeclampsia. We aimed to evaluate the persistent effect of pregnancy on maternal cardiovascular physiology.
Forty-five healthy nulliparous women underwent baseline cardiovascular assessment before conception and repeated an average of 30 months later. After baseline evaluation, 17 women conceived singleton pregnancies and all delivered at term. The remaining 28 women comprised the nonpregnant control group. We measured mean arterial blood pressure, cardiac output, plasma volume, pulse wave velocity, uterine blood flow, and flow-mediated vasodilation at each visit.
There was a significant decrease in mean arterial pressure from the prepregnancy visit to postpartum in women with an interval pregnancy (prepregnancy, 85.3±1.8; postpartum, 80.5±1.8 mm Hg), with no change in nonpregnant control subjects (visit 1, 80.3±1.4; visit 2, 82.8±1.4 mm Hg) (P=.002). Pulse wave velocity was significantly decreased in women with an interval pregnancy (prepregnancy, 2.73±0.05; postpartum, 2.49±0.05 m/s), as compared with those without an interval pregnancy (visit 1, 2.56±0.04; visit 2, 2.50±0.04 m/s) (P=.005). We did not observe a residual effect of pregnancy on cardiac output, plasma volume, uterine blood flow, or flow-mediated vasodilation.
Our observations of decreased mean arterial pressure and reduced arterial stiffness following pregnancy suggest a significant favorable effect of pregnancy on maternal cardiovascular remodeling. These findings may represent a mechanism by which preeclampsia risk is reduced in subsequent pregnancies.
妊娠会引起心血管系统迅速、渐进且显著的变化。尽管存在家族易感性,但先兆子痫的复发风险较低,这表明与妊娠相关的一种适应性变化可降低后续发生先兆子痫的风险。我们旨在评估妊娠对母体心血管生理的持续影响。
45名健康未孕女性在受孕前接受了基线心血管评估,并在平均30个月后再次进行评估。基线评估后,17名女性单胎妊娠并均足月分娩。其余28名女性组成未孕对照组。每次就诊时我们测量平均动脉血压、心输出量、血浆容量、脉搏波速度、子宫血流量和血流介导的血管舒张功能。
有间隔妊娠的女性从孕前就诊到产后平均动脉压显著降低(孕前,85.3±1.8;产后,80.5±1.8 mmHg),未孕对照组无变化(第1次就诊,80.3±1.4;第2次就诊,82.8±1.4 mmHg)(P = .002)。与无间隔妊娠的女性相比(第1次就诊,2.56±0.04;第2次就诊,2.50±0.04 m/s),有间隔妊娠的女性脉搏波速度显著降低(孕前,2.73±0.05;产后,2.49±0.05 m/s)(P = .005)。我们未观察到妊娠对心输出量、血浆容量、子宫血流量或血流介导的血管舒张功能有残留影响。
我们观察到妊娠后平均动脉压降低和动脉僵硬度降低,提示妊娠对母体心血管重塑有显著的有利影响。这些发现可能代表了一种机制,通过该机制可降低后续妊娠中先兆子痫的风险。