Pre-eclampsia

Dimitriadis, Evdokia, Rolnik, Daniel L.,Zhou, Wei, Estrada-Gutierrez, Guadalupe,Koga, Kaori, Francisco, Rossana P. V.,Whitehead, Clare,Hyett, Jon, da Silva Costa, Fabricio,Nicolaides, Kypros,Menkhorst, Ellen

Nature Reviews Disease Primers(2023)

引用 0|浏览5
暂无评分
摘要
Pre-eclampsia is a life-threatening disease of pregnancy unique to humans and a leading cause of maternal and neonatal morbidity and mortality. Women who survive pre-eclampsia have reduced life expectancy, with increased risks of stroke, cardiovascular disease and diabetes, while babies from a pre-eclamptic pregnancy have increased risks of preterm birth, perinatal death and neurodevelopmental disability and cardiovascular and metabolic disease later in life. Pre-eclampsia is a complex multisystem disease, diagnosed by sudden-onset hypertension (>20 weeks of gestation) and at least one other associated complication, including proteinuria, maternal organ dysfunction or uteroplacental dysfunction. Pre-eclampsia is found only when a placenta is or was recently present and is classified as preterm (delivery <37 weeks of gestation), term (delivery ≥37 weeks of gestation) and postpartum pre-eclampsia. The maternal syndrome of pre-eclampsia is driven by a dysfunctional placenta, which releases factors into maternal blood causing systemic inflammation and widespread maternal endothelial dysfunction. Available treatments target maternal hypertension and seizures, but the only ‘cure’ for pre-eclampsia is delivery of the dysfunctional placenta and baby, often prematurely. Despite decades of research, the aetiology of pre-eclampsia, particularly of term and postpartum pre-eclampsia, remains poorly defined. Significant advances have been made in the prediction and prevention of preterm pre-eclampsia, which is predicted in early pregnancy through combined screening and is prevented with daily low-dose aspirin, starting before 16 weeks of gestation. By contrast, the prediction of term and postpartum pre-eclampsia is limited and there are no preventive treatments. Future research must investigate the pathogenesis of pre-eclampsia, in particular of term and postpartum pre-eclampsia, and evaluate new prognostic tests and treatments in adequately powered clinical trials. Pre-eclampsia is a life-threatening disease of pregnancy and a leading cause of maternal and neonatal morbidity and mortality. This Primer by Dimitriadis and colleagues summarizes the epidemiology, mechanisms, diagnosis and treatment of pre-eclampsia, and discusses patient quality of life and open research questions for this condition.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Reproductive disorders,Medicine/Public Health,general,Epidemiology,Internal Medicine,Quality of Life Research,Medical Microbiology,Cancer Research
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要