View clinical trials related to Preeclampsia.
Filter by:This study is a double-blind randomized placebo-controlled trial of 1,550 high-risk women to assess whether daily treatment with pravastatin administered early in pregnancy reduces the rate of a composite outcome of preeclampsia, fetal loss and maternal death. Women with a prior history of preeclampsia with preterm delivery less than 34 weeks will be randomized to pravastatin or placebo daily until delivery. Women will have monthly study visits during pregnancy, a follow-up visit at 6 weeks postpartum and children will have follow-up visits at 2 and 5 years of age.
Objective: Defective placentation and inadequate trophoblastic invasion have an important place in the aetiology of preeclampsia (PrE). Trophoblasts invade the maternal decidua and remodel spiral arteries with matrix metalloproteinase-14 (MMP-14). To the best of our knowledge, studies of MMP-14 protein levels of PrE patients' sera remain unpublished. This study aims to investigate the value of serum MMP-14 and soluble endoglin (s-ENG) in PrE patients and healthy controls. Methods: The study was conducted with 30 late-onset preeclampsia patients (L-PrE) as group1 (gestational age≥34 weeks), 33 patients with normal pregnancies as group2 (gestational age≥34 weeks), 31 early-onset preeclampsia patients (E-PrE) as group3 (gestational age<34 weeks), and 31 patients with normal pregnancies as group 4 (gestational age<34 weeks). Serum MMP-14 and s-ENG levels measured by ELISA were compared.
Objective: To evaluate serum evaluate thiol/ disulfide levels in preeclampsia and address its relationship with its severity. Methods: This prospective study will include 50 pregnancies complicated with preeclampsia and 50 healthy pregnancies. The blood for analysis will obtain at the admission and serum thiol/ disulfide levels will measure using commercially available reagent kits. The continuous values were evaluated using Student's t-test, and categorical values were evaluated using the Chi-square test. P values < .05 were accepted as significant.
To identify lncRNAs differentially expressed at early stages of gestation in the serum of pregnant women, who later developed severe preeclampsia (sPE) in the third trimester of pregnancy compared to women with normal pregnancy .
100 women with severe preeclanpsia received Magnesium sulfate 6 grams intravenous over 20 minutes as a loading dose. Resistance index [RI], pulsatility index [PI] and systolic/diastolic [S/D] ratio of the umbilical artery, uterine aryery and fetal middle cerebral artery before and repeated 20 minutes after intravenous administration of 6 grams of magnesium sulphate (loading dose) over 20 minutes . fetal breathing movements and fetal gross movements are counted within 20 minutes, before and after intravenous administration of 6 grams of magnesium sulphate (loading dose) over 20 minutes
Pre-eclampsia seems to be associated with a four to five times increase risk of later microalbuminuria and CKD which might suggest a possible direct renal damage from pre-eclampsia
The investigators seek to describe the composition, architecture, and electrical conduction properties of the human uterine myometrial artery and their impact on vascular reactivity upon exposure to hypertensive stress. Non-pregnant women and pregnant women with and without hypertensive complications will be studied to evaluate the influence of these states on the myometrial arteries. Vascular over-reactivity and disruption of the normal pregnancy-associated physiologic changes of relaxed vascular tone possess the potential for non-compensated blood flow to the uterus and placenta that is insufficient to meet the metabolic demands of a growing placenta. With an understanding of these changes, the research team will be able to propose basic mechanistic changes of pathologic myogenic tone that may ultimately be investigated as potentially modifiable processes to reduce the development and/or severity of these pregnancy complications (gestational hypertension, preeclampsia, eclampsia, small for gestational age, intrauterine growth restriction and intrauterine fetal demise. ).
The Effects of Labor Stages and Interventions on Hemodynamic Measures During and After Childbirth ( Epidural, Rupture Membranses Cesarean Sections and Preeclampsia) With Noninvasive Sensors.
Previous studies have suggested that NSAID use causes an increase in blood pressure. Further, blood pressure elevation has been noted in women with pregnancy related hypertensive disease during the postpartum period. NSAIDs remain part of standard postpartum care in women with hypertensive disease. The objective of this study is to determine whether postpartum standard care withholding NSAID use is associated with a clinically significant reduction in postpartum hypertension in women with pregnancy induced hypertension. The investigators hypothesize that women with pregnancy induced hypertensive disease will be half as likely to have blood pressure elevation of 150/100 mmHg in the first 24 hours postpartum. This study is an open label randomized trial of women with antepartum hypertension. Women will be randomized to receive standard postpartum care or standard postpartum care without NSAIDs. Blood pressure measurements and patient outcomes will be recorded. The study period will begin at the time of delivery and will end at the time of hospital discharge.
Prospective, observational, monocentric, non-interventional study.