Affiliation:
1. Division of Cardiovascular Medicine Oxford Cardiovascular Clinical Research Facility Oxford United Kingdom
2. Nuffield Department of Women’s and Reproductive HealthUniversity of OxfordUniversity of Oxford Oxford United Kingdom
3. Department of Biomedical Engineering King’s College London London United Kingdom
4. Nuffield Department of Medicine Centre for Tropical Medicine and Global Health University of Oxford United Kingdom
5. Department of Paediatrics and Neonatology John Radcliffe Hospital Oxford United Kingdom
Abstract
Background
Pregnancy complications such as preterm birth and fetal growth restriction are associated with altered prenatal and postnatal cardiac development. We studied whether there were changes related specifically to pregnancy hypertension.
Methods and Results
Left and right ventricular volumes, mass, and function were assessed at birth and 3 months of age by echocardiography in 134 term‐born infants. Fifty‐four had been born to mothers who had normotensive pregnancy and 80 had a diagnosis of preeclampsia or pregnancy‐induced hypertension. Differences between groups were interpreted, taking into account severity of pregnancy disorder, sex, body size, and blood pressure. Left and right ventricular mass indexed to body surface area (
LVMI
and
RVMI
) were similar in both groups at birth (
LVMI
20.9±3.7 versus 20.6±4.0 g/m
2
,
P
=0.64,
RVMI
17.5±3.7 versus 18.1±4.7 g/m
2
,
P
=0.57). However, right ventricular end diastolic volume index was significantly smaller in those born to hypertensive pregnancy (16.8±5.3 versus 12.7±4.7 mL/m
2
,
P
=0.001), persisting at 3 months of age (16.4±3.2 versus 14.4±4.8 mL/m
2
,
P
=0.04). By 3 months of age these infants also had significantly greater
LVMI
and
RVMI
(
LVMI
24.9±4.6 versus 26.8±4.9 g/m
2
,
P
=0.04;
RVMI
17.1±4.2 versus 21.1±3.9 g/m
2
,
P
<0.001). Differences in
RVMI
and right ventricular end diastolic volume index at 3 months, but not left ventricular measures, correlated with severity of the hypertensive disorder. No differences in systolic or diastolic function were evident.
Conclusions
Infants born at term to a hypertensive pregnancy have evidence of both prenatal and postnatal differences in cardiac development, with right ventricular changes proportional to the severity of the pregnancy disorder. Whether differences persist long term as well as their underlying cause and relationship to increased cardiovascular risk requires further study.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Cited by
22 articles.
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