Affiliation:
1. From the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University Hospital, Malmö, Sweden.
Abstract
Abstract
We studied the effects of head-down tilt to 10° for 30 minutes on plasma atrial natriuretic peptide and the renin-aldosterone system in 8 preeclamptic pregnant women, 8 healthy pregnant women, and 11 nonpregnant women of fertile age. Mean arterial blood pressure did not change in the pregnant groups but increased significantly in the nonpregnant control subjects. Heart rate decreased significantly in preeclamptic women but remained unchanged in both control groups. Baseline atrial natriuretic peptide concentration was significantly higher in both preeclamptic (66±4 pmol/L) and pregnant (54±6 pmol/L) control subjects compared with nonpregnant subjects (40±2 pmol/L), but the difference between the pregnant groups was not significant. Head-down tilting induced a significant increase in atrial natriuretic peptide only in healthy pregnant women. Baseline plasma renin activity and aldosterone concentrations were significantly higher in pregnant control subjects compared with both the preeclamptic and nonpregnant groups. The differences between the preeclamptic and nonpregnant control groups were nonsignificant. After head-down tilting, plasma renin activity decreased significantly only in nonpregnant control subjects, whereas aldosterone decreased significantly in preeclamptic and nonpregnant control subjects. In preeclampsia, atrial natriuretic peptide release followed blood pressure and not changes in cardiac output. When all 27 women were studied, a correlation between atrial natriuretic peptide and mean arterial pressure was found in the left lateral supine position. The results suggest that pregnant women developing preeclampsia lose their usual hemodynamic control and show reactions resembling the nonpregnant state when subjected to head-down tilt.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Cited by
4 articles.
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