午夜福利1000集合

午夜福利1000集合

Pre-eclampsia may raise a fetus's risk of heart disease in later life

Children and teenagers who were exposed to pre-eclampsia in the uterus may be more likely to have a stroke or develop coronary artery disease, but the overall risk remains low

By Carissa Wong

15 November 2022

Being exposed to pre-eclampsia in the uterus may raise a person's later risk of coronary heart disease and strokes

Being exposed to pre-eclampsia in the uterus may raise a person’s later risk of coronary heart disease and strokes

Compassionate Eye Foundation/Natasha Alipour-Faridani

Children and teenagers who were exposed to pre-eclampsia in the uterus may be at a higher risk of stroke and heart disease. In a study of more than 8 million people, pre-eclampsia was linked to an up to 34 per cent higher risk of developing either condition by around 19 years old.

Preeclampsia is a pregnancy complication that is thought to occur due to a problem with the placenta. Symptoms include high blood pressure and protein in urine. Many cases are mild, however, pre-eclampsia can lead to severe outcomes if the condition isn’t monitored.

tend to have higher blood pressure, but it was unclear whether this elevated blood pressure then leads to a higher risk of a stroke or coronary heart disease, when the heart鈥檚 blood and oxygen supply is limited.

To learn more, and her colleagues at the Karolinska Institute in Sweden analysed the health records of nearly 8.5 million people living in Finland, Denmark and Sweden. Of these, 190,000 had been prenatally exposed to pre-eclampsia, based on their mother鈥檚 pre-eclampsia diagnosis, while nearly 8.3 million people hadn’t been exposed to the condition. The participants鈥 records were analysed from birth to age 19, on average.

Overall, the number of stroke events and coronary heart disease diagnoses were very low. Nevertheless, the participants who were prenatally exposed to pre-eclampsia were 33 per cent more likely to develop coronary heart disease and 34 per cent more likely to have had a stroke by 19, on average, compared with the participants with no prenatal pre-eclampsia exposure.

鈥淭he results are very surprising as they show higher rates of heart attacks and stroke while the offspring are still only in the first few decades of their lives,鈥 says at the University of Oxford. 鈥溛缫垢@1000集合 problems like these in the first decades of life are rare, but, because they are studying millions of patients, they have been able to identify associations between pre-eclampsia and these rare events.”

The researchers accounted for factors that can influence the risk of either a stroke, coronary heart disease or pre-eclampsia, such as the participants鈥 sex and their mothers鈥 diabetes status.

The potential risks of pre-eclampsia didn’t substantially differ when accounting for maternal body mass index, smoking status or family history of cardiovascular disease.

鈥淎s it is only an association, the best way of preventing the problems remains unknown and so our best approach remains careful observation of traditional risk factors,鈥 says Leeson. These include monitoring those with pre-existing medical conditions during pregnancy or who have had pre-eclampsia in a previous pregnancy.

JAMA Network Open

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