Abstract
The underlying mechanisms of subsequent increased risk of cardiovascular disease with a history of gestational hypertension (GH) are not known. Untreated hypertensive women (n=155, age 43+/-1 years) underwent ambulatory blood pressure (BP) monitoring and assessment of aortic pulse wave velocity (PWV) and augmentation index (AIx). Despite identical clinic BP readings, the group of women with GH (n=54) had higher (P=.002) ambulatory daytime systolic BP levels and a greater number of extreme nocturnal dippers (P=.005) than the group without GH. Women with GH had higher body mass index (P=.003), greater waist circumference (P=.02), higher levels of triglycerides (P=.002), lower levels of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (P=.004), a higher prevalence of the metabolic syndrome (P<.05) and microalbuminuria (P=.004), higher plasma renin activity (P=.03), and higher aldosterone levels (P=.01). There was no significant difference in PWV and AIx between the 2 groups. The higher prevalence of the metabolic syndrome, microalbuminuria, masked hypertension, and activation of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system but not arterial stiffness may explain the subsequent propensity to high BP and cardiovascular disease in women with GH.
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