Early onset pregnancy-induced hypertension/eclampsia in Benin City, Nigeria

Pregnancy - induced hypertension/eclampsia is a major cause of maternal and perinatal morbidity and mortality in Nigeria. There have been very few studies focused on early onset pregnancy induced hypertension/eclampsia in Nigerian women. To determine the incidence, clinical features and outcome of c...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nigerian journal of clinical practice 2010-10, Vol.13 (4), p.388-393
Hauptverfasser: Ebeigbe, P N, Aziken, M E
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description Pregnancy - induced hypertension/eclampsia is a major cause of maternal and perinatal morbidity and mortality in Nigeria. There have been very few studies focused on early onset pregnancy induced hypertension/eclampsia in Nigerian women. To determine the incidence, clinical features and outcome of cases of early onset pregnancy-induced hypertension /eclampsia in a Nigerian tertiary hospital, and compare maternofetal outcome in early and late onset disease. Methods : A retrospective study of all cases of early onset pregnancy induced hypertension/eclampsia seen over a five-year period in a tertiary hospital. Severity of disease, rates of induction of labour, caesarean section rate, maternal mortality, abruptio placenta, still births, severe birth asphyxia and early neonatal deaths. Early onset pregnancy induced hypertension/eclampsia contributed 6.3% of all cases of hypertensive disorders in pregnancy with an incidence of 1:141 deliveries. Most cases presented at between 28-32 weeks gestation (78.3%) The disease was severe at presentation or rapidly progressive in 39 cases (84.8%) leading to delivery within 72 hours of presentation. Caesarean section was the mode of delivery in 58.7% of cases. The perinatal survival rate was 34.0%. Early onset pregnancy induced hypertension was associated with significantly higher risk of presenting with eclampsia, having induction of labour and worse perinatal outcome than late onset disease. Most cases of early onset pregnancy induced hypertension in the study population presented with severe and rapidly progressive disease and were associated with significantly higher risk of obstetric intervention and worse perinatal outcome than late onset disease.
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source MEDLINE; African Journals Online (Open Access); EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals
subjects Abruptio Placentae
Adult
Eclampsia
Eclampsia - diagnosis
Eclampsia - epidemiology
Female
Gestational Age
Health aspects
Hospitals, Teaching
Humans
Hypertension in pregnancy
Incidence
Maternal Mortality
Medical research
Medicine, Experimental
Nigeria - epidemiology
Parity
Pregnancy
Pregnancy Outcome - epidemiology
Retrospective Studies
Risk Factors
Severity of Illness Index
Time Factors
Young Adult
title Early onset pregnancy-induced hypertension/eclampsia in Benin City, Nigeria
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