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Hypertensive diseases during pregnancy can cut short women's lives

HDP that can complicate pregnancies is a group of diseases which includes preeclampsia, eclampsia, gestational hypertension, and chronic hypertension.

Zee Media Bureau

New York: A new study has found that women with a history of any category of hypertensive disease of pregnancy (HDP) are at increased risk of early mortality.

HDP that can complicate pregnancies is a group of diseases which includes preeclampsia, eclampsia, gestational hypertension, and chronic hypertension.

It has long been recognised that pregnancy puts considerable stress on the body and that there are specific conditions during pregnancy that will indicate lifelong health issues.

The objective of this study was to assess whether women with a history of any hypertensive disease during pregnancy have increased risk for early mortality and to determine the timing and most common cause of their deaths.

"We now know that women with a history of any category of HDP are at increased risk for mortality from a variety of causes," stated one of the researchers Lauren Theilen from University of Utah Health Sciences Centre in Salt Lake City, US.

The study looked at births from 1939 to 2012 using the Utah Population Database.

Based on birth certificate data, researchers assigned a diagnosis of HDP and, when possible, the category of disease. Primary cause of death was ascertained from death certificates.

Of 2,083,331 birth certificates evaluated, 61,727 (three percent) had HDP. Of these, all-cause mortality was significantly increased for women with a history of HDP.

The study concluded that women with a history of HDP have increased risk of early mortality with the highest hazard ratios for neurologic, endocrine and circulatory causes.

They also had the greatest risk of mortality due to Alzheimer's disease, diabetes, ischemic heart disease, and stroke, the study said.

The study also revealed that increased mortality risk for these women begins approximately 20 years after pregnancy.

The findings will be presented at the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine's annual meeting this week in Atlanta, US.

(With IANS inputs)

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