Clinical Trials Logo

High Risk Pregnancies clinical trials

View clinical trials related to High Risk Pregnancies.

Filter by:
  • None
  • Page 1

NCT ID: NCT02340442 Recruiting - Pregnancy Clinical Trials

DVA Risk Pregnancy

Start date: October 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Maternal obesity, overweight and hypertensive disorders are among the most important risk factors for complications during pregnancy. Several lines of evidence indicate that overweight or obese women, as well as women with hypertensive disorders show increased risks of preterm birth before 32 weeks. However, an easy to determine, common reliable prognostic factor which allows for the early identifications of risk patients is still lacking. Recently, it has been reported that assessment of endothelial function may be a new promising tool for predicting the risk of adverse pregnancy outcome. As such evidence has been provided that endothelial dysfunction is prevalent among women with preeclampsia and is able to identify women at increased risk of preterm delivery and small-for-gestational-age (SGA) births. Several lines of evidence indicate that functional and structural changes of retinal vessels are altered in vascular related disease and may predict cardio-vascular events. Consequently, the current study seeks to investigate whether flicker induced vasodilatation, a well established parameter to test vascular function in-vivo is altered in women with low and high risk pregnancies when compared to a healthy control group. The data gained from this study may provide the basis for a larger longitudinal trial to assess whether vascular changes in the retina may predict the risk for complication during pregnancy.

NCT ID: NCT01384136 Active, not recruiting - Telomere Length Clinical Trials

The Telomere System in Cord Blood and in the Placenta in High Risk Pregnancies

Start date: June 2011
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

The telomere system stabilizes the chromosomes. Telomeres are shortened during senescence, in cases of genetic instability and secondary to stress. The investigators aim is to study the telomere system in cord blood and in the placenta immediately after the delivery in pregnancies defined as high risk pregnancies following sterss events such as placental insufficiency, preeclampsia, diabetes. The investigators intend to compare the telomere system in maternal blood to cord blood and to placental biopsies and to study the influence of different stressogenes on this system.