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Left Atrial Mechanics Following Preeclamptic Pregnancy

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journal contribution
posted on 2025-06-24, 13:57 authored by Jamie M O’Driscoll, Fergus P McCarthy, Veronica Giorgione, Navazh Jalaludeen, Paul T Seed, Carolyn Gill, Jenie Sparkes, Lucilla Poston, Mike Marber, Andrew H Shennan, Lucy C Chappell, Basky Thilaganathan, Paul Leeson
BACKGROUND: Preterm preeclampsia is a pregnancy complication associated with myocardial dysfunction and premature cardiovascular disease morbidity and mortality. Left atrial (LA) strain is a noninvasive index of left ventricular end diastolic pressure and an early marker of heart failure risk. This study aimed to evaluate LA strain during the postpartum period in participants with and without preterm preeclampsia and to assess whether this varied in the presence of hypertension, cardiac dysfunction or both. METHODS: In this longitudinal cohort study, 321 women from 28 hospitals with preterm preeclampsia (cases) underwent cardiovascular assessment 6 months postpartum. This is a secondary analysis of the PHOEBE study (ISRCTN01879376). An uncomplicated pregnancy control group (n=30) was recruited from a single center for comparison. A full cross-sectional transthoracic echocardiogram was performed, and from these images, the myocardial strain of the left atrium, including reservoir, conduit, and contractile strain, as well as LA stiffness, were calculated. RESULTS: At 6 months postpartum, compared with controls, prior preeclampsia was associated with a significantly attenuated LA reservoir, conduit, and contractile strain, as well as increased LA stiffness (all P <0.001). LA strain was further reduced in preeclamptic women who had and had not developed hypertension, systolic, or diastolic dysfunction at 6 months postpartum (all P <0.05). CONCLUSIONS: LA mechanics were significantly attenuated at 6 months postpartum in participants with preterm preeclampsia, whether or not they remained hypertensive or had evidence of ventricular dysfunction. Further studies are needed to determine whether postnatal LA strain may identify women at greater risk for future cardiovascular disease.

History

Author affiliation

College of Life Sciences Population Health Sciences

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Hypertension

Volume

81

Issue

7

Pagination

1644 - 1654

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

issn

0194-911X

eissn

1524-4563

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2025-06-24

Spatial coverage

United States

Language

en

Deposited by

Dr Jamie O'Driscoll

Deposit date

2025-06-18