4.5 Article

Blood pressure, arterial stiffness, and cardiovascular risk profiles in 8-12-year-old children following preeclampsia (FINNCARE-study)

期刊

JOURNAL OF HYPERTENSION
卷 41, 期 9, 页码 1429-1437

出版社

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/HJH.0000000000003485

关键词

adiposity; arterial stiffness; blood pressure; cardiovascular disease; preeclampsia

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This study found that children with preeclampsia develop alterations in blood pressure and arterial stiffness early in life, which are associated with gestational, perinatal, and child cardiovascular risk factors. The changes in blood pressure are related to maternal gestational blood pressure and prematurity, while arterial stiffness is determined by child characteristics.
Objectives: The aim was to study if children following preeclampsia (PE) develop alterations in blood pressure (BP) and arterial stiffness already early in life, and how this is associated with gestational, perinatal and child cardiovascular risk profiles. Methods: One hundred eighty-two PE (46 early-onset with diagnosis before 34 gestational weeks, and 136 late-onset) and 85 non-PE children were assessed 8-12 years from delivery. Office and 24-h ambulatory BP, body composition, anthropometrics, lipids, glucose, inflammatory markers, and tonometry-derived pulse wave velocity (PWV) and central BPs were assessed. Results: Office BP, central BPs, 24-h systolic BP (SBP) and pulse pressure (PP) were higher in PE compared with non-PE. Early-onset PE children had the highest SBP, SBP-loads, and PP. SBP nondipping during night-time was common among PE. The higher child 24-h mean SBP among PE was explained by maternal SBP at first antenatal visit and prematurity (birth weight or gestational weeks), but child 24-h mean PP remained related with PE and child adiposity after adjustments. Central and peripheral PWVs were elevated in late-onset PE subgroup only and attributed to child age and anthropometrics, child and maternal office SBP at follow-up, but relations with maternal antenatal SBPs and prematurity were not found. There were no differences in body anthropometrics, composition, or blood parameters. Conclusions: PE children develop an adverse BP profile and arterial stiffness early in life. PE-related BP is related with maternal gestational BP and prematurity, whereas arterial stiffness is determined by child characteristics at follow-up. The alterations in BP are pronounced in early-onset PE.

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