People over the age of 35, smokers, and Cesarean section mothers are the most likely to develop hypertension after pregnancy.
People with no history of high blood pressure can develop hypertension for the first time in six weeks or more after childbirth, revealed study published in Hypertension,.
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Postpartum hypertension can lead to complications such as stroke, cardiovascular disease, and kidney failure later in life, but until now, most research has underestimated the burden of new-onset postpartum hypertension. Previous studies on this topic focused primarily on blood pressure measurements taken during delivery or hospital readmissions. Furthermore, standard postpartum care consists of just one clinical visit within four to six weeks of delivery—so new cases of hypertension in the late postpartum period (six weeks to a year after childbirth) may go undiagnosed. The new study, which featured racially and ethnically diverse participants, shows that patients with all three of the above risk factors had a 29 percent risk of developing new postpartum hypertension, and that this risk increased to 36 percent among non-Hispanic Black patients.‘1 in 10 women who did not have hypertension before or during pregnancy may develop hypertension or high blood pressure up to a year after they give birth.’
This insight may provide a better understanding of the persistent racial disparities in US maternal morbidity and mortality, and the extent to which hypertension may contribute to these disparities. The findings also underscore the need for strategies to identify and manage postpartum high blood pressure among high-risk patients before they are discharged from the hospital after delivery. “The study findings have implications for postpartum care, particularly among patients without a history of hypertension,” says study lead author Dr. Samantha Parker (SPH’14), assistant professor of epidemiology at BUSPH and a 2014 alum of SPH’s PhD program in epidemiology. “We were surprised at the number of cases captured more than six weeks after delivery, a period that falls well outside of routine postpartum follow-up,” Parker says. “Monitoring during this period could mitigate severe postpartum and long-term cardiovascular complications.”
Other studies suggest that new-onset hypertension after childbirth may be up to 2.5 times more common among non-Hispanic black women compared to white women, she adds. “Understanding this relationship between pregnancy and hypertension is particularly important in addressing inequities in maternal cardiovascular disease and death for people of color.”
For the study, Parker and colleagues from BUSPH and Boston University Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine (Chobanian & Avedisian SOM) utilized medical records to examine demographic characteristics and prenatal, delivery, and postpartum data among 3,925 pregnant people who gave birth between 2016 and 2018 at Boston Medical Center. The researchers analyzed patients’ blood pressure measurements from the prenatal period through 12 months after delivery, taken at the hospital during office visits, urgent and emergency care, and readmissions.
The team defined new-onset postpartum hypertension as at least two separate blood pressure readings, beginning 48 hours after delivery, in which the systolic blood pressure was at least 140 mmHg and the diastolic blood pressure was at least 90 mmHg. Severe blood pressure included systolic readings that were at least 160 mmHg and diastolic readings that were at least 110 mmHg.
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“Future research should explore opportunities to reduce the risk of hypertension in the postpartum period and investigate the implications of postpartum hypertension on future cardiovascular health.”
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Source-Eurekalert