Pre-eclampsia medical therapy
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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Sara Zand, M.D.[2] Ogheneochuko Ajari, MB.BS, MS [3]
Overview
- The aim of therapy is starting treatment in blood pressure≥ 140/90 mmHg in office or clinic and blood pressure ≥ 135/85 mmHg at home and reaching the target systolic blood pressure 110-140 mmHg and diastolic blood pressure less than 85 mmHg regardless the type of hypertension in pregnancy.
Treatment
Medical Therapy
- The mainstay of therapy for hypertension in preeclampsia is oral methyldopa, labetalol, oxprenolol, and nifedipine, and second or third line agents include hydralazine and prazosin.
- The mainstay of therapy for preeclampsia, who have proteinuria with severe hypertension or hypertension with neurologic signs and symptoms, is magnesium sulfate (MgSO4) for convulsion prophylaxis.
- Urgent therapy for severe hypertension( blood pressure >160/110) is oral nifedipine or intravenous labetalol or hydralazine or oral labetalol.[1]
Serum Magnesium Concentration (mg/dL) | Effect |
---|---|
5–9 | Therapeutic range |
>9 | Loss of patellar reflexes |
> 12 | Respiratory paralysis |
> 30 | Cardiac arrest |
Drugs for urgent controlling of hypertension in preeclampsia[2] | Dose | Specific considration | Onset of action |
---|---|---|---|
Labetalol | 10–20 mg IV, then 20–80 mg every 10–30 minutes upto a maximum dosage of 300 mg; or infusion 1–2 mg/min IV | Contraindications: | 1-2 minutes |
Hydralazine | 5 mg IV or IM, then 5–10 mg IV every 20–40 minutes upto a maximum dosage of 200 mg or keeping infusion of 0.5–10 mg/hr | Side effects in higher dosage:
|
10-20 minutes |
Nifedipine | 10–20 mg orally, repeat in 20 minutes if needed; then 10–20 mg every 2–6 hours, maximum daily dose is 180 mg | Side effect:
|
5-10 minutes |
References
- ↑ . doi:10.1161/HYP.0000000000000065Hypertension. Check
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(help) - ↑ "Gestational Hypertension and Preeclampsia". Obstetrics & Gynecology. 135 (6): e237–e260. 2020. doi:10.1097/AOG.0000000000003891. ISSN 0029-7844.