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Trends of blood pressure and heart rate in normal pregnancies: a systematic review and meta-analysis
- Source :
- BMC Medicine, BMC Medicine, Vol 17, Iss 1, Pp 1-12 (2019)
- Publication Year :
- 2019
- Publisher :
- Bio Med Central, 2019.
-
Abstract
- Background Current reference ranges for blood pressure and heart rate throughout pregnancy have a poor evidence base. Methods This is a systematic review and meta-analysis. We included studies measuring blood pressure or heart rate from healthy pregnant women within defined gestational periods of 16 weeks or less. We analysed systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure and heart rate by gestational age. We assessed effects of measurement year and method. Results We included 39 studies undertaken in 1967–2017, containing 124,349 systolic measurements from 36,239 women, 124,291 diastolic measurements from 36,181 women and 10,948 heart rate measurements from 8317 women. Mean (95% CI) systolic blood pressure was lowest at 10 weeks gestation, 110.4 (108.5, 112.3) mmHg, rising to 116.0 (113.6, 118.4) mmHg at 40 weeks, mean (95% CI) change 5.6 (4.0, 7.2) mmHg. Mean (95% CI) diastolic blood pressure was lowest at 21 weeks gestation, 65.9 (64.2, 67.7) mmHg; rising to 72.8 (71.0, 74.6) mmHg at 40 weeks, mean (95% CI) change 6.9 (6.2, 7.5) mmHg. Mean (95% CI) heart rate rose from 79.3 (75.5, 83.1) beats/min at 10 weeks to 86.9 (82.2, 91.6) beats/min at 40 weeks gestation, mean (95% CI) change 7.6 (1.8, 13.4) beats/min. Studies using manual measurement reported higher diastolic blood pressures than studies using automated measurement, mean (95 CI) difference 4.9 (0.8, 8.9) mmHg. Diastolic blood pressure increased by 0.26 (95% CI 0.10–0.43) mmHg/year. Including only higher-quality studies had little effect on findings, with heterogeneity remaining high (I2 statistic > 50%). Conclusions Significant gestational blood pressure and heart rate changes occur that should be taken into account when assessing pregnant women. Commonly taught substantial decreases in blood pressure mid-pregnancy were not seen and heart rate increases were lower than previously thought. Manual and automated blood pressure measurement cannot be used interchangeably. Increases in diastolic blood pressure over the last half-century and differences between published studies show contemporary data are required to define current normal ranges. Study registration PROSPERO CRD42014009673
- Subjects :
- Adult
medicine.medical_specialty
Vital signs
Diastole
Blood pressure (MeSH)
Heart rate (MeSH)
Maternal physiology
lcsh:Medicine
Blood Pressure
Gestational Age
030204 cardiovascular system & hematology
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Heart Rate
Pregnancy
Reference Values
Internal medicine
Heart rate
medicine
Humans
Vital signs (MeSH)
030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicine
business.industry
lcsh:R
Gestational age
General Medicine
medicine.disease
Pregnancy (MeSH)
Blood pressure
Meta-analysis
Cardiology
Gestation
Female
business
Research Article
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- BMC Medicine, BMC Medicine, Vol 17, Iss 1, Pp 1-12 (2019)
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....957dc6d1fbabab5b9fef8851a107125f