Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
3907200 | Best Practice & Research Clinical Obstetrics & Gynaecology | 2015 | 15 Pages |
Abstract
Hypertensive disorders are the most common medical complication of pregnancy. As such, a large part of antenatal care is dedicated to the detection of pre-eclampsia, the most dangerous of the hypertensive disorders. The highlights of this chapter include progress in the use of out-of-office blood pressure measurement as an adjunct to office blood pressure measurement, pre-eclampsia defined as proteinuria or relevant end-organ dysfunction, antihypertensive therapy for severe and non-severe hypertension and post-partum follow-up to mitigate the increased cardiovascular risk associated with any of the hypertensive disorders of pregnancy.
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Authors
Laura A. Magee, Anouk Pels, Michael Helewa, Evelyne Rey, Peter von Dadelszen, Francois Audibert, Emmanuel Bujold, Anne-Marie Côté, M. Joanne Douglas, Genevieve Eastabrook, Tabassum Firoz, Paul Gibson, Andrée Gruslin, Jennifer Hutcheon, Gideon Koren,