Results 261 to 270 of about 80,926 (308)
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The central hemodynamics of severe preeclampsia

International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics, 1989
Swan-Ganz hemodynamic monitoring in 49 antepartum patients with severe preeclampsia revealed a variable hemodynamic profile. The majority of patients had normal left ventricular filling pressure (8.4 +/- 0.2 mm Hg), normal to high cardiac index (4.4 +/- 0.1 L.min-1.m2), and upper normal to moderately elevated systemic vascular resistance (1226 +/- 37 ...
W C, Mabie, T E, Ratts, B M, Sibai
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Severe Preeclampsia

2017
Preeclampsia and other hypertensive diseases during pregnancy are common causes of maternal morbidity and increase the risk for adverse fetal outcomes. Women are monitored for changes in blood pressure throughout pregnancy and depending on gestational age, once such changes are noted providers may opt to move toward delivery. Blood pressure control and
Uma Sasso, Emily McQuaid-Hanson
openaire   +1 more source

Postpartum Microangiopathic Haemolysis Complicating Severe Preeclampsia

Australian and New Zealand Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, 1997
EDITORIAL COMMENT: We accepted this paper for publication to remind readers that microangiopathic haemolysis or the HELLP syndrome can present postpartum in women with preeclampsia especially if the condition has been treated conservatively which is usually done in an attempt to gain fetal maturity.
S F, Sfameni, B, Ihle, P, Dobson
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Severe Preeclampsia Complicating Mitral Valve Stenosis

Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine, 1998
Background and Objectives We present a report of a parturient with severe mitral valve stenosis diagnosed during a previous pregnancy who developed severe preeclampsia. Methods Labor and subsequent abdominal delivery were managed with epidural ...
B, Afrangui, A M, Malinow
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Severe Preeclampsia Mimicking Acute Appendicitis

Southern Medical Journal, 1994
Preeclampsia has been frequently misdiagnosed as an entity unrelated to pregnancy, with resultant delay in appropriate management. In the case presented here, severe preeclampsia complicated by hemolysis, elevated liver enzymes, and low platelet count ("HELLP syndrome") in a 32-week twin gestation was misdiagnosed as acute appendicitis.
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Elevated circulating thrombomodulin in severe preeclampsia

American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 1993
A relationship between serum thrombomodulin and preeclampsia was investigated. In women with severely preeclamptic pregnancies, serum thrombomodulin levels were found to be significantly elevated as compared with those of matched control subjects (p < 0.005). Serum thrombomodulin levels correlated positively with serum creatinine (r = 0.854, p < 0.0001)
C D, Hsu   +5 more
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Severe Preeclampsia-Maternal and Fetal Outcome

Clinical and Experimental Hypertension. Part B: Hypertension in Pregnancy, 1982
Ninety patients with severe preeclampsia were reviewed. There was one maternal mortality and two patients who developed pulmonary edema. The corrected perinatal mortality rate was 143/100. Epidural anesthesia did not adversely affect fetal outcome. Perinatal morbidity and mortality was mainly related to the development of neonatal respiratory distress ...
T J, Beneditti   +2 more
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L1. Imitators of severe preeclampsia

Pregnancy Hypertension: An International Journal of Women's Cardiovascular Health, 2011
There are many obstetric, medical, and surgical disorders that share many of the clinical and laboratory findings of patients with severe preeclampsia–eclampsia. Imitators of severe preeclampsia–eclampsia are life-threatening emergencies that can develop during pregnancy or in the postpartum period.
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Urinary Sediment Changes in Severe Preeclampsia

Obstetrics & Gynecology, 1991
We analyzed the urinary sediment of 30 patients with severe preeclampsia every 4 hours during early labor, delivery, and the postpartum period. Fifteen normal control patients were also followed in a similar fashion. No casts were noticed in the urine samples of the control group. However, the urinary sediment of preeclamptic patients revealed the same
L, Leduc   +3 more
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Management of Severe Preeclampsia and Eclampsia

Critical Care Clinics, 1991
Pregnancy-induced hypertension is a disorder of unknown etiology unique to pregnant women. Classic clinical manifestations include hypertension, proteinuria, and edema. Early recognition and proper management of this disease may serve to avoid serious maternal complications.
G A, Dildy, D B, Cotton
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