Preeclampsia Clinical Trial
Official title:
Adjustment of the Venous Reserve Capacity by Aerobic Exercise in Women at Increased Risk of Hypertensive Pregnancy Complications
Primary objective:
- To investigate whether physical exercise prior to pregnancy in formerly preeclamptic
women results in a comparable improvement of vascular and endothelial functioning as in
women who had an uneventful pregnancy.
Secondary objectives:
- Which cardiovascular and endothelial parameters are involved in the vascular adaptation
to training in women with a history of preeclampsia.
- To study the vascular adaptation in the (next) pregnancy in women with a history of
preeclampsia compared with women with a history of an uncomplicated pregnancy, after
improvement of their physical condition by exercise training.
This study is important in order to get a better understanding of the vascular and
endothelial factors involved in preeclampsia and the effects of training on this profile.
Results of this study can contribute to the improvement of preventing hypertensive
complications in pregnancy and reduction of life time risk of cardiovascular disease in
formerly preeclamptic women.
In the Netherlands almost 15.000 women each year develop hypertensive complications like
preeclampsia during their first pregnancy. In the western world these complications account
for the most substantial attribution to neonatal and maternal morbidity and mortality. The
exact etiology of this disease cascade is still unknown. There is accumulating evidence that
subclinical abnormalities and preexistent haemodynamic, haemostatic and endothelial factors
are involved, and thought to have negative impact on placental and endothelial functioning.
The same factors are found to be risk factors for cardiovascular incidents and therefore it
is not surprising that remotely these women are more at risk for hypertension,
cardiovascular disease and stroke. Plasma volume has possibly a central role in the disease
cascade, resulting in decreased cardiovascular reserve capacity. Furthermore a low plasma
volume is found to be a strong predictor for recurrence of hypertensive complicated
pregnancy. Adaptation, like in pregnancy, is for a large extent depending on the functioning
of the venous compartment. In formerly preeclamptic women with low plasma volume is the
venous compliance and capacitance decreased, furthermore there is sympathic hyperactivity.
This combination reflects a decreased cardiovascular reserve capacity. These women with low
plasma volume show a reduced ability to adapt their cardiovascular system to a new
pregnancy.
It is known that physical exercise increases plasma volume in healthy adults, also arterial
and both venous compliance and capacitance is improved by exercise. Since abnormal
circulatory functions are common in formerly preeclamptic women, we want to study the
effects of exercise in this specific group, and compare these results with women after an
uneventful pregnancy. In preventive perspective it would be beneficial that also formerly
preeclamptic women show a circulatory adaption to aerobic exercise, possibly they could
improve their haemodynamic profile prior to their pregnancy
;
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Basic Science
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