Preeclampsia and Eclampsia (Toxemia of Pregnancy)
BASICS
- Preeclampsia: New-onset hypertension (HTN) after 20 weeks’ gestation plus proteinuria ± organ dysfunction.
- Eclampsia: New-onset grand mal seizures in a woman with preeclampsia (no pre-existing neurologic disorder).
- Most cases occur late in pregnancy or within 48 hours postpartum; can occur up to 6 weeks postpartum.
EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Preeclampsia: 5–8% of pregnancies
- Eclampsia: Main cause of perinatal mortality and morbidity (2–8% of pregnancies)
- Most common in: Primiparous and younger women; risk increases with age >40
ETIOLOGY & PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
- Genetic predisposition & abnormal placentation
- Angiogenic factors, vascular endothelial damage, oxidative stress
- Systemic effects: Vasospasm, hemoconcentration, decreased GFR, hepatic injury, CNS vasospasm/ischemia
RISK FACTORS
- Nulliparity
- Age >40 years
- Family history of preeclampsia
- Pre-existing HTN, diabetes, renal disease, obesity, SLE
- Multiple gestation, prior preeclampsia, IVF
GENERAL PREVENTION
- Prenatal care & BP control
- Low-dose aspirin (60–80 mg) after 12 weeks GA in moderate/high-risk women
- Calcium supplementation in deficient populations
COMMONLY ASSOCIATED CONDITIONS
- Abruptio placentae
- Fetal growth restriction, preterm delivery, fetal demise
- Maternal complications: seizures, pulmonary edema, liver/kidney failure, maternal death
DIAGNOSIS
Preeclampsia Diagnosis
- BP ≥140/90 mm Hg (2x, 4 hrs apart after 20 weeks)
- AND proteinuria (>300 mg/24 hr, protein/creatinine ≥0.3, or dipstick ≥2+)
- OR (if no proteinuria):
- Platelets <100,000/µL
- Transaminases >2x normal ± RUQ pain
- Creatinine >1.1 mg/dL or doubling
- Pulmonary edema
- Headache or visual symptoms
Preeclampsia with Severe Features
- BP ≥160/110 mm Hg (after 20 weeks) AND any severe feature above
Eclampsia Diagnosis
- New-onset tonic-clonic, focal, or multifocal seizures (no history of epilepsy)
HISTORY & EXAM
- May be asymptomatic
- Rapid excessive weight gain (>2.3 kg/week)
- Severe: RUQ/epigastric pain, headache, altered mental status, visual symptoms
- Seizures (single or recurrent)
Physical Exam - BP as above - Headache, visual changes, RUQ pain may precede seizures
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Chronic/gestational HTN
- Chronic HTN with superimposed preeclampsia
- Seizure disorders (epilepsy, tumors, meningitis, ruptured aneurysm)
- Gestational HTN (no proteinuria/organ dysfunction)
DIAGNOSTIC TESTS
- Urinalysis for protein at each prenatal visit
- CBC, creatinine, transaminases, LDH, uric acid
- 24h urine or spot protein/creatinine
- Fetal monitoring: kick counts, NST, BPP, US for growth/amniotic fluid
- HELLP suspicion: look for DIC, thrombocytopenia, liver/renal failure
TREATMENT
General Principles
- Balance timing of delivery with maternal/fetal risks
- Definitive treatment: DELIVERY
- Preeclampsia (any severity) at ≥37 weeks: Recommend delivery
Preeclampsia without Severe Features
- Possible outpatient management if stable
- Daily BP, weekly labs
- Fetal: kick counts, NST/BPP/US
- Deliver at 37 weeks
Preeclampsia with Severe Features
- Admit for inpatient care
- Daily labs, continuous fetal monitoring
- Magnesium sulfate (MgSO₄) IV for seizure prophylaxis (continue 24h postpartum)
- Antihypertensives to keep SBP <160 & DBP <110
- Delivery at ≥34 weeks (immediate if maternal/fetal instability, HELLP, etc.)
Steroids for fetal lung maturity if <34 weeks
Eclampsia/Seizures
- MgSO₄ IV bolus 4–6 g over 15–30 min, then 1–2 g/hr infusion
- Additional MgSO₄ for recurrent convulsions; monitor reflexes, respiration, urine output
Antihypertensive Therapy
- Start for BP ≥160/110 mm Hg within 30–60 min
- IV Labetalol: 20 mg, repeat/titrate up to max 300 mg/day
- IV Hydralazine: 5–10 mg, repeat/titrate
- Oral Nifedipine: Immediate-release 10 mg, repeat in 20 min as needed
Second Line for Seizures
- Diazepam, lorazepam, phenytoin, or phenobarbital if refractory
ONGOING CARE
- History of preeclampsia = long-term CVD risk
- Monitor BP postpartum (risk persists up to 6 weeks)
- Avoid salt restriction; monitor fluid status
- Counsel on recurrence risk in future pregnancies
PROGNOSIS
- Recurrence up to 40% if preeclampsia before 30 weeks in nulliparas
- 25% of eclamptics have HTN in future pregnancies
- Higher future risk of essential HTN, mortality in multiparas
COMPLICATIONS
- Maternal/fetal death
- Neurologic deficits (usually transient)
- Organ failure, abruptio placentae, DIC, HELLP syndrome
ICD-10 CODES
- O14.90 Unspecified pre-eclampsia, unspecified trimester
- O15.00 Eclampsia in pregnancy, unspecified trimester
- O14.00 Mild to moderate pre-eclampsia, unspecified trimester
CLINICAL PEARLS
- Management depends on severity & gestational age.
- Magnesium sulfate is the DOC for severe preeclampsia/eclampsia.
- Low-dose aspirin started late 1st trimester in high-risk women can prevent preeclampsia.
- Continue maternal BP monitoring postpartum—risk persists after delivery.