PRE ECLAMPSIA MAY BE CAUSED BY THE FETUS
Pre-eclampsia, the
potentially deadly condition that affects pregnant women, may be caused by
problems meeting the oxygen demands of the growing fetus, according to an
editorial in the November issue ofAnaesthesia, the journal of the Association of Anaesthetists
of Great Britain and Ireland (AAGBI).
The finding has
promoted the co-author of the editorial, Associate Professor Alicia Dennis,
Consultant Anaesthetist & Director of Anaesthesia Research at the Royal
Women's Hospital in Melbourne, Australia, to call for the name of the condition
to be changed to make women more aware of the risks.
"Referring to it
as hypertension caused by pregnancy, rather than the historically out-dated
name of pre-eclampsia, would mean that women worldwide could be better informed
and counselled about the condition" she says.
Associate Professor
Dennis co-wrote the editorial, published online in the journalAnaesthesia,
with Dr Julian Castro, a consultant cardiologist at St Vincent's Hospital,
Melbourne.
"The cause of
pre-eclampsia, and identifying which women will develop hypertension in
pregnancy, have puzzled health professionals for decades, so we were very keen
to present the theories put forward by Dennis and Castro" says Dr Steve
Yentis, Editor in Chief of Anaesthesia, which is published by Wiley-Blackwell
on behalf of the AAGBI.
Dennis and Castro
believe that pregnancy is uneventful in women who are able to maintain a
sustained, balanced oxygen supply to meet the changing metabolic demands of the
fetus. It is when a woman has a reduced capacity to provide oxygen to the fetus
that it can become deadly to the mother and baby.
Their new unified
theory of pre-eclampsia challenges the current view that pre-eclampsia is
caused specifically by a problem with the placenta. It also challenges the
widely held view that pre-eclampsia is caused by an as yet unidentified
substance that the placenta produces. It proposes that there are many different
conditions, either in the mother, in the placenta or in the baby that lead to
inefficient oxygen delivery to the baby. The response of the mother is to try
and deliver more oxygen to the baby to help the baby grow, but this raises her
own blood pressure and damages her body.
"Hypertension, or
high blood pressure, in pregnant women remains a serious global problem
affecting around 13 million women a year" says the Anaesthesia editorial,
which was written after the authors analysed research papers from across the
world.
Associate Professor
Dennis explains: "There has been no decrease in the prevalence of
pre-eclampsia over the last 50 years. We were looking for a unified theory to
explain why so many pregnant women develop this condition."
Dennis and Castro say
that in order to reduce the number of deaths due to pre-eclampsia, the medical
profession needs to start demystifying this common cardiovascular consequence
of pregnancy.
The Anaesthesia editorial
says that if the effects of the condition, and its treatment, were better
understood in the clinical setting, there would be fewer deaths from the
condition.
Pre-eclampsia can be
fatal for mothers and babies or cause serious health complications, including
seizures, kidney failure, heart failure and haemorrhage.
One in four women with
uncomplicated hypertension in pregnancy will develop pre-eclampsia and it is
more common in women carrying twins or triplets, women who are obese or women
with diabetes.
There is no accurate
test to determine which pregnant women will develop the condition. The authors
suggest that there is an urgent need to apply the same standards of management
in pregnant women that are used in non-pregnant adults with life-threatening
heart disease, especially the use of cardiac ultrasound.
Comments
Post a Comment