Abstract

Maternal and feto-placental Doppler flow velocity waveforms were studied during acute and chronic antihypertensive therapy in patients with pregnancy-induced hypertension. Eight primigravidae were acutely treated with oral nicardipine. Diastolic blood pressure fell at 30, 45 and 60 min after nicardipine. The uteroplacental systolic/diastolic ratio rose significantly at 30 min, but this change was no longer apparent at 60 min. Umbilical artery and maternal brachial artery systolic/diastolic ratios were unchanged. Fifteen patients with mild pre-eclampsia were chronically treated with oral pindolol. Diastolic blood pressure fell significantly within 24 h. The uteroplacental systolic/diastolic ratio rose 3 days after pindolol. Brachial artery or umbilical artery systolic/diastolic ratios were unchanged. A control group of 15 patients with untreated mild pre-eclampsia showed a significant rise in uteroplacental and umbilical artery systolic/diastolic ratios within 7 days of starting recordings. In patients with pregnancy-induced hypertension, acute and chronic blood pressure reduction was associated with no change in umbilical artery or maternal brachial artery Doppler systolic/diastolic ratios and a transient rise in the uteroplacental systolic/diastolic ratio.

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