Abstract

Pregnancy-associated diseases of the cardiovascular system occur in up to 10% of all pregnancies and the incidence is increasing. Besides congenital heart disease or pre-existing cardiomyopathy in the mother, the clinical focus has moved especially to peripartum cardiomyopathy (PPCM) because of the conditionʼs dramatic clinical course and the identification of the underlying mechanisms. This review article concentrates therefore on PPCM, which occurs either in the last month of pregnancy or in the first 6 months following delivery in women with previously healthy hearts. The global incidence is estimated today at roughly 1 : 1000 pregnancies. The condition is heterogeneous, ranging from mild disease to severe acute heart failure with cardiogenic shock and sudden cardiac death of the mother. Important risk factors are pregnancy-associated hypertensive complications, multiple pregnancy and greater maternal age. The pathogenesis comprises cleavage, induced by increased oxidative stress, of the lactation hormone prolactin into a toxic hormone fragment that damages blood vessels, known as the 16-kDalton protein fragment. The lactation-blocking drug bromocriptine prevents prolactin release and promotes healing of PPCM in combination with pharmacological heart failure therapy; it appears to prevent recurrence in subsequent pregnancies. Uncomplicated pregnancy is possible in most patients with congenital heart disease. The foetal complications include an increased abortion rate, prematurity and smallness for gestational age, as well as an increased risk of cardiac malformations. The maternal risk comprises mainly arrhythmias, progressive heart failure and thrombembolic complications, with the risk of vessel dissection with a low mortality risk of < 1% in the case of aortopathies. Individual risk assessment and corresponding close monitoring of the pregnancy are required.

Highlights

  • Cardiomyopathies are defined, according to a position paper of the European Society of Cardiology, as myocardial diseases characterised by structural or functional restrictions of the myocardium in the absence of coronary heart disease, hypertension, valvular disease or congenital cardiac disease that could explain the dysfunction [1]

  • It is a cardiomyopathy that is characterised by left ventricular systolic dysfunction (< 45 %), which occurs at the end of pregnancy or in the months following delivery [2, 3]

  • peripartum cardiomyopathy (PPCM) is defined through a diagnosis of exclusion; in the position paper of the European Society of Cardiology from this year, which can be accessed at www.escardio.org [2], the definition states: “PPCM is an idiopathic cardiomyopathy that occurs in the last month of pregnancy or in the months following delivery or termination of pregnancy in women with previously healthy hearts”

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Summary

Introduction

Cardiomyopathies are defined, according to a position paper of the European Society of Cardiology, as myocardial diseases characterised by structural or functional restrictions of the myocardium in the absence of coronary heart disease, hypertension, valvular disease or congenital cardiac disease that could explain the dysfunction [1]. This review article concentrates on PPCM, which occurs either in the last month of pregnancy or in the first 6 months following delivery in women with previously healthy hearts. Uncomplicated pregnancy is possible in most patients with congenital heart disease.

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