Pregnant women with chronic hypertension and superimposed pre-eclampsia have high cerebral perfusion pressure

Michael A Belfort , Cathy Tooke-Miller , John C Allen Jr. , Michael A Varner , Charlotta Grunewald , Henry Nisell , J.Alan Herd
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Abstract

Objective To determine any differences in cerebral perfusion pressure in patients with chronic hypertension compared with those with chronic hypertension and superimposed pre-eclampsia.

Design A prospective observational study.

Setting University hospital clinic and labour and delivery suite.

Participants Fifteen women with chronic hypertension and 15 with superimposed pre-eclampsia.

Methods Transcranial Doppler ultrasound was used to measure blood velocity in the middle cerebral arteries of the patients. Systemic blood pressure in the brachial artery was measured simultaneously. Middle cerebral artery, resistance index, pulsatility index, and cerebral perfusion pressure were calculated and plotted on the same axes as data from normal pregnant women. Cerebral perfusion pressure values outside of the 5th and 95th centiles were regarded as abnormal. Cerebral perfusion pressure data from the chronic hypertension and superimposed pre-eclampsia groups were also expressed in terms of the number of normative standard deviations from the mean value for normal pregnancy (Multiples of the Standard Deviation: MOS). All studies were conducted before labour, under similar conditions, and before volume expansion or treatment. Statistical analysis was by Student's t test and Fisher's exact test as appropriate with significance set at a two-tailed P<0.05.

Results Patient demographics and blood pressure were not significantly different between the two groups. The resistance index and pulsatility index were not significantly different (neither absolute nor multiples of the standard deviation values). The absolute cerebral perfusion pressure was significantly higher in the patients with superimposed pre-eclampsia. The group of women with superimposed pre-eclampsia had a significantly higher mean value of cerebral perfusion pressure measured as multiples of the standard deviation from the mean value for normal pregnancy, despite there being no blood pressure difference.

Conclusions Superimposed pre-eclampsia is associated with significantly higher cerebral perfusion pressure measurements compared with women with uncomplicated chronic hypertension. This is not directly related to a higher blood pressure. The difference in cerebral perfusion pressure may be used to speculate upon the pathophysiology of the increased risk for eclampsia seen in patients with superimposed pre-eclampsia.

慢性高血压合并先兆子痫的孕妇脑灌注压高
目的探讨慢性高血压患者脑灌注压与合并先兆子痫患者脑灌注压的差异。设计前瞻性观察性研究。设置大学医院诊所和产房。参与者:15名患有慢性高血压的女性和15名伴有先兆子痫的女性。方法采用经颅多普勒超声测量患者大脑中动脉血流速度。同时测量肱动脉的全身血压。计算大脑中动脉、阻力指数、搏动指数、脑灌注压,与正常孕妇的数据在同一轴上绘制。第5、95百分位以外的脑灌注压值均为异常。慢性高血压和叠加子痫前期组的脑灌注压数据也以正常妊娠平均值的标准标准差(multiple of the standard Deviation: MOS)表示。所有的研究都是在分娩前,在类似的条件下,在扩容或治疗之前进行的。统计分析采用Student's t检验和Fisher确切检验,显著性设置为双尾P<0.05。结果两组患者人口统计学特征及血压差异无统计学意义。阻力指数和搏动指数无显著差异(既不是绝对值,也不是标准差值的倍数)。合并先兆子痫患者的绝对脑灌注压明显增高。尽管没有血压差异,但合并先兆子痫的妇女脑灌注压的平均值明显高于正常妊娠的平均值,其标准差为正常妊娠平均值的倍数。结论:与无并发症的慢性高血压妇女相比,叠加子痫前期与显著较高的脑灌注压测量值相关。这与高血压没有直接关系。脑灌注压的差异可用于推测叠加先兆子痫患者子痫风险增加的病理生理学。
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