Abstract

BackgroundMaternal hypertensive disorders of pregnancy (HDPs) are strongly associated with offspring congenital heart defects. ObjectivesThis study assessed whether infants exposed to maternal HDPs were also more likely to have subtle cardiac structural and functional abnormalities than unexposed infants. MethodsWe used regression analyses to compare: 1) left ventricular parameters from conventional echocardiography performed in infants from the Copenhagen Baby Heart Study born to mothers with preeclampsia, gestational hypertension (GH), or no HDP; and 2) advanced echocardiographic parameters for 545 term infants born to mothers with preeclampsia and 545 matched infants not exposed to HDPs. ResultsCompared with infants unexposed to HDPs (n = 17,384), infants exposed to preeclampsia (n = 754) had a thicker interventricular septum in end-diastole (adjusted mean difference [± SD] 0.05 [±0.02] mm; P = 0.004), thicker left ventricular posterior wall (0.04 [±0.02] mm; P = 0.009), larger left ventricular internal diameter (0.12 [±0.06] mm; P = 0.04), and larger left ventricular volume (0.21 [±0.10] mL; P = 0.03). Systolic function changes included increased fractional shortening (0.36% [±0.14%]; P = 0.01) and stroke volume (0.18 [±0.07] mL; P = 0.006), whereas diastolic function changes included lower transmitral early peak inflow velocity (−1.76 [±0.49] mL; P = 0.0003), lower mitral annulus lateral wall a' (−0.21 [±0.09] cm/s; P = 0.02), and smaller lateral E/e’ (−1.06 [±0.38] cm/s; P = 0.005). Conversely, there was little evidence of any association between maternal GH (n = 469) and offspring left ventricular parameters. ConclusionsMaternal preeclampsia, but not GH, was associated with subtle newborn cardiac morphological and functional alterations, including thickening of the left ventricular myocardium and altered systolic and diastolic function.

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