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Pre-eclampsia: pathophysiology and clinical implications.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Type

Article

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Authors

Burton, Graham J 
Redman, Christopher W 
Roberts, James M 

Abstract

Pre-eclampsia is a common disorder that particularly affects first pregnancies. The clinical presentation is highly variable but hypertension and proteinuria are usually seen. These systemic signs arise from soluble factors released from the placenta as a result of a response to stress of syncytiotrophoblast. There are two sub-types: early and late onset pre-eclampsia, with others almost certainly yet to be identified. Early onset pre-eclampsia arises owing to defective placentation, whilst late onset pre-eclampsia may center around interactions between normal senescence of the placenta and a maternal genetic predisposition to cardiovascular and metabolic disease. The causes, placental and maternal, vary among individuals. Recent research has focused on placental-uterine interactions in early pregnancy. The aim now is to translate these findings into new ways to predict, prevent, and treat pre-eclampsia.

Description

Keywords

Age of Onset, Female, Humans, Placenta, Pre-Eclampsia, Pregnancy, Risk Factors, Trophoblasts, Uterus

Journal Title

BMJ

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0959-8146
1756-1833

Volume Title

366

Publisher

BMJ

Rights

All rights reserved