Pregnant Women with
Asthma Symptoms Face Risks
Women with moderate to severe symptoms
of asthma during pregnancy are more likely to develop preeclampsia
than women with no asthma symptoms, the results of a new study
show.
The hallmarks of preeclampsia in
pregnancy are high blood pressure and impaired kidney function,
which can impair the health of both the mother and her baby.
"Our findings indicate that having
a self-reported diagnosis of asthma does not increase the risk
of preeclampsia; rather, it is having active asthma symptoms through
pregnancy that increases the risk," Dr. Elizabeth W. Triche from
Yale University School of Medicine in New Haven, Connecticut,
and colleagues explain in the medical journal Obstetrics and Gynecology.
Published studies relating asthma
and preeclampsia have produced inconsistent results, "perhaps
due to differences in study populations, varying definitions of
asthma, and ... asthma medication use," the investigators note
in their report.
They followed 1708 pregnant women,
of whom 656 had a diagnosis of asthma and 1052 did not. The team
carefully accounted for asthma treatment and medication use, as
well as other factors such as obesity, age, and smoking early
in pregnancy.
According to the researchers, neither
overall asthma severity nor having physician-diagnosed asthma
were related to the odds of developing preeclampsia. However,
the frequency of asthma symptoms (wheeze, persistent cough, and
chest tightness) during pregnancy was tied to preeclampsia risk.
Compared with women with no asthma
symptoms, women with daily symptoms were three times more likely
to develop preeclampsia.
"Taken together with previous findings
that actively managed asthmatics have better outcomes than untreated
asthmatics, our findings suggest that patients with asthma symptoms,
with or without an asthma diagnosis, should be closely monitored
during their pregnancies," Triche and colleagues conclude.
SOURCE: Obstetrics and Gynecology,
September 2004.
Reference
Source 89
September 14, 2004
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