Disorders of Pregnancy
Three important relations exist between renal disease and the pregnant state: the effect of existing renal disease on the outcome of the pregnancy; the effect of the normal hemodynamic, endocrinological, and immunological changes of pregnancy on pre-existing renal disease; and the occurrence of distinct renal syndromes in association with pregnancy.
Since uremia causes a disruption in normal hormonal cycles, fertility in women is greatly diminished when the BUN is greater than 40 to 50 mg/ dl. However, those patients with mild renal insufficiency [BUN <25 mg/dl) have about a 75 per cent chance of completing a normal, full-term pregnancy. Fetal loss is significant at higher levels of azotemia and when hypertension is a prominent part of the renal disease. The nephrotic syndrome, without azotemia, does not usually affect the outcome of pregnancy, but the birth weight of the infant is decreased in the face of significant maternal hypoalbuminemia.
In most cases, pregnancy does not appear to adversely affect the course of pre-existing renal disease. Of particular note is the case of lupus nephritis (see below), in which the renal activity of the disease is generally decreased during pregnancy. However, some patients with more severe glomerular disease experience an exacerbation of nephritis in the first trimester of pregnancy and a significant number of patients have an increase in nephritic signs with a decrease in GFR after delivery. Increased doses of steroids may prevent this occurrence. Finally, patients with scleroderma will often experience a significant decline in GFR and an increase in blood pressure during pregnancy.
Hypertension in pregnancy requires careful consideration. Blood pressure usually falls in the first weeks of a normal pregnancy and returns to progestational values only near term. Normal pregnancy is characterized by ECF volume expansion, an increased cardiac output, a decreased systemic vascular resistance, and resistance to the vasopressor effects of angiotensin II. Therefore, any absolute elevation of blood pressure or a pattern of rising blood pressure in early pregnancy is abnormal. At least three categories of pregnancy-related hypertension exist.
Toxemia is a syndrome of hypertension, proteinuria, hyperuricemia, and edema that is seen in the third trimester of pregnancy. It occurs predominantly in young primagravidas or in women over the age of 40. The signs may be deceptive, since mild edema is common in normal pregnancies, and the elevated blood pressure and serum uric acid concentrations must be interpreted in light of the values for a normal pregnancy. A blood pressure of 130/80 may be abnormal at 30 weeks gestation. Likewise, the serum uric acid concentration is often reduced to less than 3 mg/dl in a normal pregnancy, so that a value of 5 to 6 mg/dl is distinctly abnormal.
The renal lesion in toxemia is known as en-dotheliosis and is totally reversible. The histo-pathology consists of endothelial cell swelling in an ischemic glomerulus with fibrin deposited between the endothelial cell and the basement membrane. Treatment of toxemia consists of vigorous control of blood pressure and delivery of the fetus as soon as it is judged to be viable. Modest azotemia may be seen, but renal failure is rare. Complete normalization of blood pressure and cessation of proteinuria occur following delivery. There is no increased risk of developing sustained hypertension after the single occurrence of toxemia in a young woman.
Essential hypertension may be present before pregnancy and may have little effect on the outcome of the pregnancy. Hypertensive patients are more prone to develop toxemia. Only when diastolic blood pressures remain above 100 mm Hg is there significant fetal loss.
A final group of patients consists of those in whom hypertension develops in late (third trimester) pregnancy in successive gestations. These patients seem to have an increased likelihood of developing sustained hypertension later in life.
Besides toxemia, two other distinct renal syndromes may be seen in association with pregnancy. Bilateral renal cortical necrosis is a rare syndrome that almost always follows a dire obstetric complication; abruptio placentae, retained fetal fragments, or septic abortion. The presentation is usually that of a scant output of bloody urine, followed by sudden, virtually complete anuria. Renal failure is always present, and evidence of disseminated intravascular coagulation is common. The renal histopathology is that of frank necrosis throughout the cortex. The degree of necrosis ranges from patchy areas to confluent cortical necrosis. Oligoanuria is prolonged in all cases, but a few patients recover sufficient renal function to stop dialysis after weeks to months of treatment.
Postpartum renal failure, or the adult hemolytic-uremic syndrome, is a rare disorder that has its onset from two to three days up to eight to nine weeks postpartum. The preceding pregnancy and delivery are usually normal. A microangiopathic hemolytic anemia with prominent fragmentation of red blood cells is evident. The kidneys show marked deposition of fibrin in arterioles and glomeruli and intimal proliferation in blood vessels. The vascular proliferative lesion is the same as that seen in accelerated hypertension, although patients with postpartum renal failure are typically normotensive. About 75 per cent of patients have permanent renal failure and require dialysis or transplantation.
- CLINICAL CLASSIFICATION OF JAUNDICE
- Alterations in Glomerular Hemodynamics, Parathyroid Hormone Metabolism, and Systemic Arterial Blood Pressure
- Diagnosis
- Pulmonary Vasculitis
- Pathogenic Mechanisms
- Visceral Angiography
- DRUGS
- Proteinuria
- Metabolism of Drugs in Patients with Renal Insufficiency
- Pyuria
- TUMOR METASTASES TO THE LIVER
- iMATOPOIESIS
- GAS TRANSFER
- Hypersensitivity Pneumonitis
- Renal Biopsy
- CARDIAC TUMORS
- Lower GI Bleeding
- FACTORS AFFECTING THE RATE OF LOSS OF NEPHRONS
- Clinical Manifestations
- Hematopoietic System
- PULMONARY GAS EXCHANGE
- Treatment
- Mechanism of Proteinuria
- Renal Glycosuria
- Lidocaine
- RENAL METABOLISM Of DRUGS
- PHYSIOLOGY OF THE PULMONARY CIRCULATION
- PRE-EXCITATIOIi SYNDROMES
- V-GASTROINTESTINAL DISEASE
- Outcome and Prognosis
- SPECIFIC CLINICAL DISORDERS
- CHRONIC RENAL FAILURE
- OBSTRUCTIVE LUNG DISEASE
- Renal Venous Occlusion
- OXYGEN THERAPY AND MECHANICAL VENTILATION