4.7 Article

Consistency among Office, Home, and Ambulatory Blood Pressure Values in Women with Chronic Hypertension and History of Eclampsia or Preeclampsia

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE
Volume 11, Issue 17, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jcm11175065

Keywords

arterial hypertension; eclampsia; pre-eclampsia; ambulatory blood pressure monitoring

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Adequate control of blood pressure is crucial for pregnant women with a history of eclampsia or pre-eclampsia to prevent complications. However, the importance of different methods of blood pressure measurements, such as office, home, and ambulatory measurements, in high-risk pregnancy is not well understood. This study compared the blood pressure values obtained from these three different methods in women with a history of eclampsia or pre-eclampsia. The findings suggest that ambulatory blood pressure measurements provide different values compared to office and home measurements, and the target blood pressure for ambulatory measurements in high-risk pregnancy hypertension should be determined based on the predictive value of adverse pregnancy outcomes.
Adequate control of blood pressure (BP) is essential to prevent complications in pregnant women with a history of eclampsia or pre-eclampsia. However, the importance of office (OBPM), home (HBPM), and ambulatory (ABPM) BP measurements for proper control and prognosis in high-risk pregnancy is unknown. The present study aimed to compare BP values obtained during these three different BP measurements in women with a history of eclampsia or pre-eclampsia. This study included 79 pregnant women with chronic hypertension and a documented history of eclampsia or pre-eclampsia in previous pregnancy/pregnancies. Every fifth week of the study, all participants underwent ABPM, HBPM and OBPM. BP values from the 10th, 25th, and 37th weeks of pregnancy were evaluated. Therapy was intended to meet the ABPM treatment goal of <130/80 mmHg. Day, night, and 24 h ABPM systolic BP values were lower than HBPM and OBPM values at each study visit. Night and 24 h ABPM diastolic BP values were lower than HBPM and OBPM values, while day 24 h ABPM values were slightly higher than HBPM and OBPM values. ABPM provides different BP values than OBPM and HBPM. Target BP for ABPM in high-risk pregnancy hypertension should be estimated based on the predictive value of adverse pregnancy outcomes.

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