1 / 52

Hypertensive Disorders in Pregnancy

Learn definitions, diagnostic criteria, treatment, and prevention of hypertensive disorders in pregnancy. Includes review of surveillance, complications, and management approaches.

Download Presentation

Hypertensive Disorders in Pregnancy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Hypertensive Disorders in Pregnancy John Bettler October 4, 2018

  2. Pre-test

  3. Objectives • Review definitions/diagnostic criteria of hypertensive disorders in pregnancy • Review recommendations for preeclampsia prevention strategies • Review antenatal surveillance • Review treatment (antepartum/intrapartum/postpartum)

  4. Case 1

  5. Definitions • Chronic Hypertension • Gestational Hypertension • Preeclampsia • Chronic hypertension with superimposed preeclampsia • Eclampsia • HELLP Syndrome

  6. Definitions • Chronic Hypertension -2 or more BP >140 SBP or 90 DBP taken at least 4 hours apart diagnosed prior to pregnancy, before 20 weeks gestation or persists greater than 12 weeks postpartum. • Gestational Hypertension • Preeclampsia • Chronic hypertension with superimposed preeclampsia • Eclampsia • HELLP Syndrome

  7. Definitions • Chronic Hypertension • Gestational Hypertension - Elevated BP diagnosed after 20 weeks without proteinuria. • Preeclampsia • Chronic hypertension with superimposed preeclampsia • Eclampsia • HELLP Syndrome

  8. Definitions • Chronic Hypertension • Gestational Hypertension • Preeclampsia - Elevated BP with proteinuria or without proteinuria if other lab abnormalities present • Chronic hypertension with superimposed • Eclampsia • HELLP Syndrome

  9. Definitions • Chronic Hypertension • Gestational Hypertension • Preeclampsia • Chronic hypertension with superimposed preeclampsia - Rise of SBP >30 mm, DBP >15 or development of proteinuria or symptoms/lab tests c/w preeclampsia with severe features or HELLP. • Eclampsia • HELLP Syndrome

  10. Definitions • Chronic Hypertension • Gestational Hypertension • Preeclampsia • Chronic hypertension with superimposed preeclampsia • Eclampsia - convulsions or coma unrelated to known CNS disorder and with signs and symptoms of preeclampsia. • HELLP Syndrome

  11. Definitions • Chronic Hypertension • Gestational Hypertension • Preeclampsia • Chronic hypertension with superimposed preeclampsia • Eclampsia • HELLP Syndrome - (better called multisystem disease) Hemolysis, Elevated Liver enzymes, Low Platelets.

  12. Chronic hypertension treatment • Threshold for treatment initiation = 150/100 • Antihypertensives • Methyldopa, labetalol, and nifedipine • Thiazides may be continued • Contraindicated: ACE-I/ARB, Atenolol • Surveillance • Urinalysis at each visit for proteinuria (?) • Growth ultrasounds starting @ 24 weeks (+dopplers if concern for IUGR) • Antenatal testing if on meds or any complications • NST twice weekly starting @ 32 weeks • AFI weekly starting @ 32 weeks • IOL @ 38-39 wks

  13. potential COMPLICATIONS OF CHRONIC HTN • Superimposed preeclampsia (13-40%) • Cesarean section (OR 2.7) • Postpartum hemorrhage (OR 2.2) • GDM (OR1.8) • Abruptio placentae (OR ~3) • Perinatal death • Fetal growth restriction

  14. Prevention of Preeclampsia - Cochrane

  15. ACOG COMMITTEE OPINION, July 2018 One or more More than one Low-dose aspirin use during pregnancy. ACOG Committee Opinion No. 743. American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. ObstetGynecol 2018;132:e44–52.

  16. Case 2

  17. Diagnostic Criteria for Pre-eclampsia • Blood pressure • ≥ 140 SBP or ≥ 90 DBP on two occasions at least 4 hours apart after 20 weeks GA in woman w/o h/o HTN • ≥160 SBP or ≥ 110 DBP “confirmed within a short interval (minutes)” AND • Proteinuria: • ≥300 mg /24 hr urine collection or • Protein/creatinine ≥0.3 mg/dL • Dipstick reading of 1+ (“used only if other quantitative methods not available”) OR • Absence of proteinuria but new onset of any of the severe features

  18. Preeclampsia work-up • Labs • Urine P/C or 24hr urine prot. • Order the P/C ratio separately as STAT “protein, random urine” and STAT “creatinine, random urine” because the results return quickly • CBC (plts) • Serum Cr • AST, ALT • Uric acid (indicator of renal function) • LDH (indicator of microangiopathic hemolysis)

  19. Management of Preeclampsia w/o sf • Expectant management before 37 weeks • Closely watch for development of severe features • Twice weekly BP measurements • Antepartum surveillance • Non-stress tests (NST’s), amniotic fluid measurement, biophysical profile • Growth ultrasound every 3 to 4 weeks with dopplers • Weekly labs (No need to follow urine) • Delivery at 37 weeks

  20. Case 3

  21. Severe features • SBP ≥ 160 or DPB ≥ 110 • Progressive renal insufficiency with Cr >1.1 mg/dl or doubled from baseline assuming no other renal disease • Cerebral or visual disturbance • Impaired liver function • Low platelets <100,000 • Pulmonary edema Proteinuria is not necessary for the diagnosis of preeclampsia if there is new-onset HTN with one of the severe features listed above.

  22. Characterization of Symptoms Immediately Preceding Eclampsia • 3,267 deliveries and 46 cases of eclampsia (1.4%) • Most common prodromal neurological symptoms (regardless of the degree of hypertension OR whether the seizure occurred antepartum or postpartum): • Headaches (80%) • Visual disturbance (45%), • 20% of women with eclampsia reported no neurologic symptoms before the seizure Cooray SD, Edmonds SM, Tong S, et al. Characterization of Symptoms Immediately Preceding Eclampsia. Obstetrics & Gynecology, Vol 118(5):1000-1004, November 2011. 43

  23. Intrapartum treatment for severe features • Antihypertensives • Seizure prophylaxis • Monitoring/Documentation • Contact MCH Fellow for consult (minimum of Category C)

  24. OB Pre-eclampsia or Hypertension

  25. Intrapartum treatment for severe features • Antihypertensives • Seizure prophylaxis • Monitoring/Documentation

  26. antihypertensive Key Clinical Pearl • The critical initial step in decreasing maternal morbidity and mortality is to administer anti-hypertensivemedications within 60 minutes of documentation of persistent (retested within 15 minutes) BP ≥160 systolic, and/or >105-110 diastolic. • Ideally, antihypertensive medications should be administered as soon as possible, and availability of a “preeclampsia box” will facilitate rapid treatment. • In Martin et al., stroke occurred in: • 23/24 (95.8%) women with systolic BP > 160mm Hg • 24/24 (100%) had a BP ≥ 155 mm Hg • 3/24 (12.5%) women with diastolic BP > 110mm Hg • 5/28 (20.8%) women with diastolic BP > 105mm Hg Martin JN, Thigpen BD, Moore RC, Rose CH, Cushman J, May. Stroke and Severe Preeclampsia and Eclampsia: A Paradigm Shift Focusing on Systolic Blood Pressure, ObstetGynecol 2005;105-246. 48

  27. Hypertensive Medication Administration Oral v. IV • IV Hydralazine • Onset: 5-20 min • Peak: 15-30 min • PO Nifedipine • Onset: 5-20 min* • Peak: 30-60 min • IV Labetalol • Onset: 2-5 min • Peak: 5 min • PO Labetalol: • Onset: 20 min-2 hrs • Peak: 1-4 hrs *PO, (oral) not sublingual nifedipine, onset of action is 15-30 minutes depending on the reference source. * Cohan J, Checcio L. Nifedipine in the Management of Hypertensive Emergencies: Report of Two Cases and Review of the Literature. 1985 Nov;3(6):524-30 Raheem I, Saiid R, Omar S, et al. Oral nifedipine versus intravenous labetalol for acute blood pressure control in hypertensive emergencies of pregnancy: a randomized trial. BJOG 2012;119:78-85. http://www.uspharmacist.com/content/d/feature/i/1444/c/27112/ Current Cardiovascular Drugs, edited by William H. Frishman, Angela Cheng-Lai, James Nawarskas, 4th edition 2005 pg. 2-186 51

  28. Intrapartum treatment for severe features • Antihypertensives • Seizure prophylaxis • Monitoring/Documentation

  29. Magnesium sulfate • Treatment of choice in women who have preeclampsia with severe features • prevent eclamptic seizures (NNT = 100) • placental abruption (NNT = 100) • Loading dose • 4-6 gm IV over 10 minutes • Continuous drip • 2gm/hr

  30. Magnesium Sulfate in the Management of Preeclampsia Magpie Trial Collaboration Group. Do women with pre-eclampsia, and their babies, benefit from magnesium sulfate? • 58% reduction in seizures • 45% reduction in maternal death* • 33% reduction in placental abruption *The 45% reduction in maternal death is not statistically significant but clinically important. Altman D, Carroli G, Duley L, et al. The Magpie Trial: a randomized placebo-controlled trial; Lancet 2002;359:1877–90. 55

  31. Intrapartum treatment for severe features • Antihypertensives • Seizure prophylaxis • Monitoring/Documentation

  32. Magnesium monitoring/documentation • PIH labs q 6 hours • Monitoring for worsening dz and mag toxicity: • Limit input (<100 cc/hr IV and <125 125 cc/hr IV+PO) • urine output (≥ 30 cc/hr or 100 cc over 4 hrs) • DTR’s • Respiratory status (RR >12 and auscultation for pulmonary edema) • Mental status • FHTs (moderate variability) • Mag levels are usually only checked if there are concerns or known elevated Cr • Intrapartum notes • Q 2 hours

  33. Magnesium serum Levels Antidote = calcium gluconate 1 gm IV over 3 min

  34. Case 4

  35. OB Postpartum Pre-eclampsia or Hypertension

  36. Postpartum Care • Blood pressure goals • Antihypertensives • Seizure prophylaxis • Period of observation

  37. Postpartum Care • Blood pressure goals • Antihypertensives • Seizure prophylaxis • Period of observation

  38. Postpartum Blood pressure goals • SBP > 150/100 on serial measurements (interval of measurements and whether to start immediately or follow a few BPs depends on how high it is initially)

  39. Postpartum Care • Blood pressure goals • Antihypertensives • Seizure prophylaxis • Period of observation

  40. Postpartum antihypertensives • If you think BP meds need to be started PP, discuss w/ MCH fellow re. which med to use • Initial options for treatment; • Oral nifedipine 10mg immediate release given serially to determine total needed dose • Oral nifedipine XL 30 mg daily • Oral labetalol 100-200 mg TID • If HTN persists > 24 hours avoid NSAIDS

  41. Postpartum Care • Blood pressure goals • Antihypertensives • Seizure prophylaxis • Period of observation

  42. Postpartum seizure prophylaxis • Magnesium for 12-24 hours after delivery, depending on clinical course • At UNM duration of magnesium infusion is usually 24 hours • Diuresis (greater than 4 L/day) is believed to be the most accurate clinical indicator of resolution of preeclampsia/eclampsia, but is not a guarantee against the development of seizures

  43. Postpartum Care • Blood pressure goals • Antihypertensives • Seizure prophylaxis • Period of observation

  44. Postpartum observation • Inpatient • 72 hours after delivery for gestational HTN or preeclampsia • Do not discharge patient until BP is well controlled for at least 24 hours • Outpatient • 7–10 days after delivery • Earlier in women with symptoms or whose BPs were difficult to control or labile in the postpartum period • If elevated BPs persist at 6-8 weeks postpartum, the diagnosis is chronic HTN (which we already knew she had, so the need for ongoing med tx is not unexpected)

  45. Long-term implications • 2X increased risk of later-life CV disease (MI, CVA, CHF) in all pre-e based on large epidemiological studies • Increased risk of preeclampsia in future pregnancies • Make sure she is on reliable contraception to space pregnancies • Optimize risk factors prior to next pregnancy • Seek medical care as soon as she knows she is pregnant • Patients should be advised: • Maintain ideal body weight • Aerobic exercise 5X/wk • Diet high in fiber/vegetables/fruits, low in fat • Avoid tobacco

  46. Post-test

More Related