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Hypertension in Pregnancy. OBJECTIVES. List criteria for the diagnosis of preeclampsia List criteria for the diagnosis of severe preeclampsia/HELLP syndrome Discuss current management considerations. Hypertension. Sustained BP elevation of 140/90 or greater Proper cuff size
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OBJECTIVES • List criteria for the diagnosis of preeclampsia • List criteria for the diagnosis of severe preeclampsia/HELLP syndrome • Discuss current management considerations
Hypertension • Sustained BP elevation of 140/90 or greater • Proper cuff size • Measurement taken while seated • Use 5th Korotkoff sound
Forms of HTN in Pregnancy • Gestational Hypertension • Formerly called Pregnancy-Induced Hypertension • No proteinuria
Forms of HTN in Pregnancy • Gestational Hypertension • Preeclampsia • Hypertension with proteinuria • May have other evidence of end-organ disease • Edema • Visual changes • Headache • Epigastric pain • Laboratory changes
Older Criteria for Gestational HTN • 30/15 increase in BP over baseline levels • No longer appropriate • 73% of patients will exceed 30 mm systolic and 57% will exceed 20 mm diastolic
Forms of HTN in Pregnancy • Gestational Hypertension • Preeclampsia • Chronic Hypertension • As a group these occur in 12 to 22% of pregnant patients and are directly responsible for approximately 18% of maternal mortality nationally.
Chronic Hypertension • Pre-existing hypertension • Hypertension before 20 weeks in the absence of gestation • If hypertension persists beyond 6 weeks postpartum
Hypertension after 20 weeks of gestation Proteinuria- 300mg Edema Preeclampsia
Hypertension after 20 weeks of gestation Proteinuria- 300mg Edema BP > 160 systolic or >110 diastolic 5grams of protein in 24 hour urine Oliguria Cerebral of visual distrubances Pulmonary edema or cyanosis Epigastric or RUQ pain Impaired liver function Thrombocytopenia IUGR Preeclampsia
Prevention • Low dose ASA ineffective in patients at low risk • Calcium supplementation is ineffective (2.0 g of calcium gluconate per day) • No compelling evidence that either are harmful • Recent study done with antioxidant (1,000mg VitC and 400mg VitE). • Small study that needs to be confirmed.
Cardiovascular Effects • Hypertension • Increased cardiac output • Increased systemic vascular resistance • Hypovolemia
Neurologic Effects • Seizures-eclampsia • Headache • Cerebral edema • Hyper-reflexia
Pulmonary Effects • Capillary leak • Reduced colloid osmotic pressure • Pulmonary edema
Hematologic Effects • Volume contraction • Elevated hematocrit • Low platelets • Anemia due to hemolysis
Renal Effects • Decreased glomerular filtration rate • Increased BUN/creatinine • Proteinuria • Oliguria • Acute tubular necrosis
Fetal Effects • Increased perinatal morbidity • Placental abruption • Fetal growth restriction • Oligohydramnios • Fetal distress
BP > 160-180 systolic or 110 diastolic Proteinuria > 5 g per day Pulmonary edema Oliguria Elevated liver enzymes Low platelets Growth restriction Decreased AFV Headache Epigastric pain Severe Preeclampsia
Management • The ultimate cure is delivery • Assess gestational age • Assess cervix • Fetal well-being • Laboratory assessment • Rule out severe disease!!
Gestational HTN at Term • Delivery is always a reasonable option if term • If cervix is unfavorable and maternal disease is mild, expectant management with close observation is possible
Mild Gestational HTN not at Term • Rule out severe disease • Conservative management • Serial labs • Twice weekly visits • Antenatal fetal surveillance • Outpatient versus inpatient
Indications for Delivery • Worsening BP • Nonreassuring fetal condition • Development of severe PIH • Fetal lung maturity • Favorable cervix
Unfavorable Cervix • No contraindication to prostaglandin agents • If < 32 weeks, consider cesarean • When favorable, oxytocin
Hypertensive Emergencies • Fetal monitoring • IV access • IV hydration • The reason to treat is maternal, not fetal • May require ICU
Criteria for Treatment • Diastolic BP > 105-110 • Systolic BP > 200 • Avoid rapid reduction in BP • Do not attempt to normalize BP • Goal is DBP < 105 not < 90 • May precipitate fetal distress
Characteristics of Severe HTN • Crises are associated with hypovolemia • Clinical assessment of hydration is inaccurate • Unprotected vascular beds are at risk, eg, uterine
Key Steps Using Vasodilators • 250-500 cc of fluid, IV • Avoid multiple doses in rapid succession • Allow time for drug to work • Avoid over treatment
Acute Medical Therapy • Hydralazine • Labetalol • Nifedipine • Nitroprusside • Diazoxide • Clonidine
Hydralazine • Dose: 5-10 mg every 20 minutes • Onset: 10-20 minutes • Duration: 3-8 hours • Side effects: headache, flushing, tachycardia, lupus like symptoms • Mechanism: peripheral vasodilator
Labetalol • Dose: 20mg, then 40, then 80 every 20 minutes, for a total of 220mg • Onset: 1-2 minutes • Duration: 6-16 hours • Side effects: hypotension • Mechanism: Alpha and Beta block
Nifedipine • Dose: 10 mg po, not sublingual • Onset: 5-10 minutes • Duration: 4-8 hours • Side effects: chest pain, headache, tachycardia • Mechanism: CA channel block
Clonidine • Dose: 1 mg po • Onset: 10-20 minutes • Duration: 4-6 hours • Side effects: unpredictable, avoid rapid withdrawal • Mechanism: Alpha agonist, works centrally
Nitroprusside • Dose: 0.2 – 0.8 mg/min IV • Onset: 1-2 minutes • Duration: 3-5 minutes • Side effects: cyanide accumulation, hypotension • Mechanism: direct vasodilator
Seizure Prophylaxis • Magnesium sulfate • 4-6 g bolus • 1-2 g/hour • Monitor urine output and DTR’s • With renal dysfunction, may require a lower dose
Magnesium Sulfate • Is not a hypotensive agent • Works as a centrally acting anticonvulsant • Also blocks neuromuscular conduction • Serum levels: 6-8 mg/dL
Toxicity • Respiratory rate < 12 • DTR’s not detectable • Altered sensorium • Urine output < 25-30 cc/hour • Antidote: 10 ml of 10% solution of calcium gluconate 1 v over 3 minutes
Treatment of Eclampsia • Few people die of seizures • Protect patient • Avoid insertion of airways and padded tongue blades • IV access • MGSO4 4-6 bolus, if not effective, give another 2 g
THE FIRST THING TO DO AT A SEIZURE IS TO TAKE YOUR OWN PULSE!
Alternate Anticonvulsants • Diazepam 5-10 mg IV • Sodium Amytal 100 mg IV • Pentobarbital 125 mg IV • Dilantin 500-1000 mg IV infusion
After the Seizure • Assess maternal labs • Fetal well-being • Effect delivery • Transport when indicated • No need for immediate cesarean delivery
Other Complications • Pulmonary edema • Oliguria • Persistent hypertension • DIC
Pulmonary Edema • Fluid overload • Reduced colloid osmotic pressure • Occurs more commonly following delivery as colloid oncotic pressure drops further and fluid is mobilized
Treatment of Pulmonary Edema • Avoid over-hydration • Restrict fluids • Lasix 10-20 mg IV • Usually no need for albumin or Hetastarch (Hespan)
Oliguria • 25-30 cc per hour is acceptable • If less, small fluid boluses of 250-500 cc as needed • Lasix is not necessary • Postpartum diuresis is common • Persistent oliguria almost never requires a PA cath
Persistent Hypertension • BP may remain elevated for several days • Diastolic BP less than 100 do not require treatment • By definition, preeclampsia resolves by 6 weeks
Disseminated Intravascular Coagulopathy • Rarely occurs without abruption • Low platelets is not DIC • Requires replacement blood products and delivery
Anesthesia Issues • Continuous lumbar epidural is preferred if platelets normal • Need adequate pre-hydration of 1000 cc • Level should always be advanced slowly to avoid low BP • Avoid spinal with severe disease