Treatment Overview
If your blood pressure begins to rise during pregnancy, you will
need close monitoring until after your baby is born. Your blood pressure may
remain mildly elevated (transient hypertension), which is not considered
dangerous for you or your fetus. However, it can become dangerous if it turns
out to be a sign of
preeclampsia or if it progresses to more severe
high blood pressure (hypertension).
High blood pressure (hypertension) during pregnancy
If you have high blood pressure during your pregnancy, your
treatment will include:
- Close monitoring by a
doctor for signs of preeclampsia.
- A balanced diet,
mild aerobic exercise, and possibly blood pressure medicine. Management
with a balanced diet and mild aerobic exercise (such as walking) may be
sufficient treatment for high blood pressure during pregnancy. Some women with
ongoing (chronic) high blood pressure stay on antihypertensive medicine but are
prescribed a lower dose during pregnancy if their blood pressure improves.
Mild high blood pressure in pregnancy usually only requires
close monitoring. If you have high blood pressure that is rapidly increasing or
has reached moderately high levels (above 140/105 mm Hg, or millimeters of
mercury), you may be treated with blood pressure medicine.
Severe high blood pressure (higher than 160 mm Hg
systolic or 110 mm Hg
diastolic) can result in poor fetal growth
(intrauterine growth restriction) and is likely to be treated with an
antihypertensive medicine.
Some high blood pressure medicines are dangerous
during pregnancy.17 If you take high blood
pressure medicines, talk to your health professional about the safety of your
medicine before you become pregnant or as soon as you learn you are pregnant.
Make sure that your health professional has a complete list of all medicines
that you are taking.
Preeclampsia and eclampsia
If you show any signs of preeclampsia, you will be closely
monitored, either with frequent office visits or in the hospital. The goal of
treatment is to prevent preeclampsia from becoming life-threatening to you and
your fetus while prolonging the pregnancy long enough for your fetus to be
mature and healthy at birth.
Your treatment will last for the rest of your pregnancy, your
delivery, and your first postpartum weeks and will depend on how severe your
condition is. Treatment options include an anticonvulsant medicine; blood
pressure medicine if your blood pressure is dangerously high; and delivery,
which is the only known "cure" for preeclampsia.
- For mild preeclampsia that is not rapidly
getting worse, you may only have to reduce your level of activity, monitor how
you feel, and have frequent office visits and testing.
- For
moderate or severe preeclampsia, or for preeclampsia that is rapidly getting
worse, you will require hospitalization, where
expectant management typically includes bed rest,
medicine, and close monitoring of you and your fetus. Severe preeclampsia or an
eclamptic seizure is treated with
magnesium sulfate. This medicine can stop a seizure
and can prevent seizures. If you are near delivery or have severe preeclampsia,
your doctor will plan to deliver your baby as soon as possible.
- If
your condition becomes life-threatening to you or your fetus, magnesium sulfate
to prevent seizure and delivery are the only treatment options. If you are less
than 34 weeks pregnant and a 24- to 48-hour delay is possible, you will likely
be given
antenatal corticosteroids to speed up fetal lung
development before delivery.
After childbirth
If you have moderate to severe preeclampsia, your risk of
seizures (eclampsia) continues for the first 24 to 48 hours after childbirth
(in very rare cases, seizures are reported later in the postpartum period). You
will therefore continue
magnesium sulfate for 24 hours after delivery.1
Unless you have chronic high blood pressure, your blood pressure
is likely to return to normal a few days after delivery. In rare cases, it can
take 6 weeks or more. Some women still have high blood pressure 6 weeks after
childbirth yet return to normal levels over the long term. If your diastolic
blood pressure reading (the lower, second number) is still over 100 mm Hg when
you leave the hospital, you will likely be prescribed a high blood pressure
medicine.1 You will then have regular checkups with
your health professional to monitor your recovery.
Taking high blood pressure medicine while
breast-feeding
There are several commonly used high blood pressure medicines
that have no reported effects on the breast-feeding baby. These medicines
include labetalol and propranolol, which are most commonly recommended, as well
as hydralazine and methyldopa. Nadolol, metoprolol, and nifedipine are
detectable in mothers' milk, but they have no known effects on the
breast-feeding baby.18
What To Think About
To prepare for a talk with your doctor or nurse-midwife about
your condition, see
questions to ask your doctor about high blood pressure and
pregnancy.
Anticonvulsant medicine
Moderate or severe preeclampsia or an eclamptic seizure is
treated with intravenous magnesium sulfate to prevent seizures. For mild
preeclampsia, magnesium sulfate is sometimes used to prevent seizures
(eclampsia). Research has not yet clarified whether magnesium sulfate is
beneficial or needed for the treatment of mild preeclampsia.9, 19
High blood pressure medicine
Lowering blood pressure with medicine:
- Does not prevent preeclampsia from getting
worse, because high blood pressure is only a symptom of the condition, not a
cause.
- Can reduce blood flow to the
placenta if blood pressure is lowered too rapidly,
causing problems for the fetus. Medicine is therefore reserved for preventing
severely high blood pressure levels that are potentially life-threatening to
you or your fetus.
Delivery
A vaginal delivery is usually safest for the mother and is
attempted first if she and the baby are both stable. If preeclampsia is rapidly
getting worse or fetal monitoring suggests that the baby cannot safely handle
labor contractions, a
cesarean section (C-section) delivery is
needed.
Ongoing issues
Preeclampsia usually does not cause long-term problems. Healthy
habits, such as regular exercise and eating a healthy diet, may help prevent
future health problems. If you have had preeclampsia, talk to your doctor about
what you can do to stay healthy.