4.7 Review

Pre-eclampsia and offspring cardiovascular health: mechanistic insights from experimental studies

Journal

CLINICAL SCIENCE
Volume 123, Issue 1-2, Pages 53-72

Publisher

PORTLAND PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.1042/CS20110627

Keywords

blood pressure; cardiovascular disease; in utero; offspring; pre-eclampsia; pregnancy; vascular function

Funding

  1. British Heart Foundation (BHF) [FS/06/024, FS/11/65/28865]
  2. NIHR Oxford Biomedical Research Centre
  3. Oxford BHF Centre for Research Excellence
  4. Clarendon Scholarship
  5. Commonwealth Commission Scholarship
  6. British Heart Foundation [FS/11/65/28865] Funding Source: researchfish

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Pre-eclampsia is increasingly recognized as more than an isolated disease of pregnancy. Women who have had a pregnancy complicated by pre-eclampsia have a 4-fold increased risk of later cardiovascular disease. Intriguingly, the offspring of affected pregnancies also have an increased risk of higher blood pressure and almost double the risk of stroke in later life. Experimental approaches to identify the key features of pre-eclampsia responsible for this programming of offspring cardiovascular health, or the key biological pathways modified in the offspring, have the potential to highlight novel targets for early primary prevention strategies. As pre-eclampsia occurs in 2-5% of all pregnancies, the findings are relevant to the current healthcare of up to 3 million people in the U.K. and 15 million people in the U.S.A. In the present paper, we review the current literature that concerns potential mechanisms for adverse cardiovascular programming in offspring exposed to pre-eclampsia, considering two major areas of investigation: first, experimental models that mimic features of the in utero environment characteristic of pre-eclampsia, and secondly, how, in humans, offspring cardiovascular phenotype is altered after exposure to pre-eclampsia. We compare and contrast the findings from these two bodies of work to develop insights into the likely key pathways of relevance. The present review and analysis highlights the pivotal role of long-term changes in vascular function and identifies areas of growing interest, specifically, response to hypoxia, immune modification, epigenetics and the anti-angiogenic in utero milieu.

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