Association of severe preeclampsia and vascular damage assessed by noninvasive markers of arterial stiffness

Nefrologia (Engl Ed). 2023 Nov-Dec;43(6):703-713. doi: 10.1016/j.nefroe.2023.12.001. Epub 2024 Jan 9.

Abstract

Background: Preeclampsia (PE) is a hypertensive disorder of pregnancy associated with high maternal and fetal morbidity and mortality and increased future risk of cardiovascular complications.

Objective: To analyze whether women who have had PE with severe features in their pregnancy have higher arterial stiffness (AS) parameters than those whose PE course was without signs of severity.

Methods: Sixty-five women who developed PE during their gestation were evaluated, divided into two groups: PE group without severe features or non-severe PE (n=30) and PE group with severe features or severe PE (n=35). Carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (cfPWV), central augmentation index corrected to a heart rate of 75 beats per minute (AIxc75) and central augmentation pressure (cAP) were determined one month and six months postpartum. Comparison of proportions was carried out using the chi-square test, comparison of means between groups using the Student's t-test or the Mann-Whitney test, and comparison of means of the same group at different evolutionary moments, using the t-test or the Wilcoxon test. Correlation, with and between hemodynamic parameters, was carried out with Spearman's correlation coefficient and the association between demographic variables, personal history and hemodynamic parameters, and altered arterial stiffness parameters was carried out using linear and logistic regression models.

Results: Women with severe PE presented, both at 1 and 6 months postpartum, higher values of blood pressure, both central and peripheral, as well as AR and pulse amplification parameters, than those women whose PE was not severe. Central augmentation index (cAIx) values at 1 month and 6 months postpartum were higher, although not significantly, in the severe PE group compared to the non-severe PE group (24.0 (16.5-34.3) vs. 19.0% (14-29) and 24.0 (14.0-30.0) vs. 20.0% (12.3-26.8), respectively). Carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (cfPWV) was significantly higher at both 1 and 6 months postpartum in the severe PE group compared to the non-severe PE group (10.2 (8.8-10.7) vs. 8.8m/s (8.3-9.6) and 10.0 (8.8-10.6) vs. 8.8m/s (8.3-9.3), respectively). Central systolic pressure and central pulse pressure amplification were also higher, although not significantly, in the severe PE group in comparison with the non-severe PE group.

Conclusions: Women who have had severe PE have more pronounced arterial stiffness parameters than those in whom PE was not particularly severe. The determination of cAIx and cfPWV, as a strategy for the assessment of cardiovascular risk, should be evaluated among women who have had PE.

Keywords: Arterial stiffness; Carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity; Central augmentation index; Central augmentation pressure; Preeclampsia; Presión de aumento central; Rigidez arterial; Velocidad de onda de pulso carótida-femoral; Índice de aumento central.

MeSH terms

  • Blood Pressure / physiology
  • Female
  • Heart Rate / physiology
  • Humans
  • Pre-Eclampsia*
  • Pregnancy
  • Pulse Wave Analysis
  • Vascular Stiffness* / physiology