View clinical trials related to Pre-eclampsia.
Filter by:Women destined to develop gestational hypertensive complications often exhibit deviant hemodynamic adaptation patterns before overt clinical disease. Gestational hypertension and late onset preeclampsia are associated with an exaggerated rise in cardiac output on top of a higher prepregnant value, whereas a shallow rise in cardiac output and the lack of a peripheral resistance drop predisposes to the much less common early onset-preeclampsia along with impaired fetal growth. Early treatment of altered cardiac output and peripheral resistance adjustments might prevent development of gestational hypertensive complications. The investigators aim to evaluate early cardiovascular adjustments during pregnancy in a high-risk population, and to pharmaceutically adjust deviant cardiovascular adaptations with beta-blockade, centrally acting sympatholytic agents or vasodilating agents when appropriate to prevent adverse effects on neonatal birth weight.
This study will collect high-quality data on how practicing obstetricians across the U.S. currently manage patients showing signs and/or symptoms of preeclampsia and how the results of Progenity's test change clinical decision making. To do so, this study leverages simulated patient cases called Clinical Performance and Value vignettes (CPVs) in a proven methodology to rapidly measure physician care decisions.
Introduction: Cadmium, lead and vanadium important pollutants produced from anthropogenic activities, has been suggested to be embryotoxic and fetotoxic in a lot of studies. However, the causes of preeclampsia are little known and heavy metals merit further investigation. We tested whether late-onset preeclampsia (L-PrE) was associated with exposure to these metals. Methods: This study was designed to determine maternal plasma cadmium, lead and vanadium concentrations in women with L-PrE (n=46) compared to those of normotensive women (n=46). These three heavy metals concentrations measured using inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry were compared.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of intravenous KW-3357 in patients with early-onset severe preeclampsia by comparing the prolongation days of pregnancy with that of placebo.
In patients with suspected placental vascular disease who do not require hospitalization, the use of the sFlt-1 (Soluble FMS like tyrosin-kinase-1)/PlGF (Placental Growth Factor)/ assay can most likely help teams to define the best possible management.
Preeclampsia (PE) is a pregnancy-related hypertensive disorder drive by an anti-angiogenic environment. Women with PE have 2-4 time higher risk of developing cardiovascular disease (CVD), although the specific mechanism relating these two conditions remains elusive. In non-pregnant patients with coronary disease, angiogenic profile proved to be an independent predictor of poor prognosis and is associated with a higher mortality rate. The investigators hypothesized that in PE, the antiangiogenic environment determines the degree of cardiac dysfunction and remodeling and the posterior cardiovascular risk.
According to U.S. Pharmacist® "low-dose aspirin refers to dosages between 81 mg and 325 mg taken every day to prevent heart attacks, strokes, and colon cancer." It has been found through research that low-dose aspirin also decreases the risk of preeclampsia. The American College of Obstetrics and Gynecologists (ACOG) recommends low-dose aspirin (81mg/day) for women at high risk of preeclampsia. However, some researchers report that a dose of aspirin < 100 mg/day does not seem to decrease the risk of preeclampsia. Another trial studying patients who are at a high risk for preterm preeclampsia, reported a reduction in the occurrence of preeclampsia among patients taking aspirin at a dose of 150 mg. The purpose of this pragmatic randomized study is to compare the difference in the effectiveness of two doses of aspirin: 81 mg versus 162 mg in the prevention of preeclampsia in pregnant women who are at a moderate to high risk for developing preeclampsia.
Although extensively studied, the cause of preeclampsia remains uncertain other than it is thought that the placenta plays a critical role in the development of preeclampsia. Recent data revealed that exosomes released from the placenta could cause preeclampsia by transporting specific cargo responsible for the pathophysiological changes associated with the systemic disease. By isolating these exosomes from maternal blood and placental tissue in patients diagnosed with preeclampsia and studying their biochemical, cellular and molecular mechanism in an animal model, the investigators hope to elucidate the critical role that exosomal cargo plays in the development of preeclampsia and cardiovascular remodeling. This will be accomplished by obtaining patient samples from volunteers delivering at the Women and Infants Center and taking the samples to the lab for quantification, characterization, and identification of key functional roles through in/ex vivo, in vitro, and profiling studies. The investigators believe this work will be valuable as hope exists to define the functional role exosomes play in the development of preeclampsia that leads to cardiovascular remodeling. Data from this study will shed more light on the functional role of exosomal cargo in normal and pathological pregnancies and point towards novel therapeutic intervention strategies for preeclampsia associated with cardiovascular disease.
The investigator measured the arterial stiffness using cardio-ankle vascular index (CAVI) test in patient with preeclampsia and normal pregnant women to evaluate the longitudinal change of CAVI and their predictors.
Introduction: The etiology/pathophysiology of preeclampsia remains an enigma. Cellular immunity is a key factor in the etiology of late-onset preeclampsia (L-PrE). Presepsin is split out from the phagocytes membranes after phagocytosis. To investigators knowledge, this is the first study in literature to investigate maternal blood concentrations of presepsin in preeclampsia and healthy pregnant women. Methods: The investigators examined maternal plasma interleukin-6, presepsin and pentraxin-3 concentrations in pregnant women with (n=44) and without L-PrE (n=44). These three inflammatory markers concentrations measured using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays were compared.