Abstract

Uterine artery Doppler waveforms are often studied to determine whether a patient is at risk of developing pathologies such as pre‐eclampsia. Many uterine waveform indices have been developed, which attempt to relate characteristics of the waveform with the physiological adaptation of the maternal cardiovascular system, and are often suggested to be an indicator of increased placenta resistance and arterial stiffness.Doppler waveforms of four patients, two of whom developed pre‐eclampsia, are compared with a comprehensive closed‐loop model of pregnancy. The closed‐loop model has been previously validated but has been extended to include an improved parameter estimation technique that utilises systolic and diastolic blood pressure, cardiac output, heart rate, and pulse wave velocity measurements to adapt model resistances, compliances, blood volume, and the mean vessel areas in the main systemic arteries. The shape of the model‐predicted uterine artery velocity waveforms showed good agreement with the characteristics observed in the patient Doppler waveforms. The personalised models obtained now allow a prediction of the uterine pressure waveforms in addition to the uterine velocity. This allows for a more detailed mechanistic analysis of the waveforms, eg, wave intensity analysis, to study existing clinical indices. The findings indicate that to accurately estimate arterial stiffness, both pulse pressure and pulse wave velocities are required. In addition, the results predict that patients who developed pre‐eclampsia later in pregnancy have larger vessel areas in the main systemic arteries compared with the two patients who had normal pregnancy outcomes.

Highlights

  • During a healthy pregnancy, significant physiological adaptations occur to the structure and function of the cardiovascular system

  • The creation of the placenta occurs to facilitate nutrient transport exchange between the maternal and foetal systems, which helps in reducing the vascular resistance of the uterine region, and significant increases in blood supply to the uterus are observed over the course of pregnancy

  • The adaptation of the uterine vessel diameters and compliances, total vascular resistance, total arterial compliance, and blood volume occurs very quickly in early pregnancy while slows down significantly as pregnancy progresses toward the mid-second trimester and third trimester

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Summary

Introduction

Significant physiological adaptations occur to the structure and function of the cardiovascular system. Blood pressure normally decreases over the first and second trimesters before rising again in the third trimester, close to term.[4] The blood supply to several organs, the kidneys and uterus, substantially increases. The creation of the placenta occurs to facilitate nutrient transport exchange between the maternal and foetal systems, which helps in reducing the vascular resistance of the uterine region, and significant increases in blood supply to the uterus are observed over the course of pregnancy. It has been observed that the uterine artery can more than double in diameter during a healthy pregnancy, which helps accommodate the increased demands of blood supply of the uterine region.[5]

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