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Pathophysiology and Maternal Biologic Markers of Preeclampsia

Overview
Journal Endocrine
Specialty Endocrinology
Date 2003 Feb 14
PMID 12583608
Citations 1
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Abstract

Preeclampsia-increased blood pressure and proteinuria appearing after the twentieth week of pregnancy--is a major cause of materal and neonatal morbidity, leading to iatrogenic prematurity. Several lines of evidence suggest that the disorder is owing to diminished invasion of spiral arteries by trophoblastic cells, followed by reduced perfusion of the fetoplacental unit and oxidative stress. These alterations, in the presence of maternal predisposition, lead to endothelial dysfunction and occurrence of the clinical syndrome of preeclampsia (multisystemic lesions). Although the pathophysiology of preeclampsia is still unknown, progress has been made during the past 10 yr, and the early identification of at-risk women with the use of biochemical; ultrasonographic; and, more recently, genetic susceptibility markers has been the subject of intense research. In the present review, markers of maternal predisposition, placental implantation, oxidative stress, vasomotor regulation, and endothelial dysfunction are investigated as candidate markers in the early prediction of preeclampsia. Unfortunately, at the present time, no marker has been proven to have a clinically useful predictive performance in the general pregnant population, and, therefore, more research in that area is warranted.

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