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Treatment of Hypertension in Pregnancy: A Complete Guide for Mothers and Healthcare Providers

Treatment of Hypertension in Pregnancy
From the Doctor's Desk

Introduction

High blood pressure during pregnancy is a serious health concern that can affect both the mother and the developing baby. Known medically as hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, these conditions are one of the leading causes of maternal and fetal complications worldwide.

In this guide, we’ll break down:

  • The different types of hypertension in pregnancy
  • When and how to treat high blood pressure during pregnancy
  • Safe medications for mothers and their babies
  • Special considerations like preeclampsia, eclampsia, and delivery decisions

This article combines medical detail with plain-language explanations so both healthcare providers and expectant mothers can understand what’s going on and how to respond.

Types of Hypertension in Pregnancy

Hypertensive disorders in pregnancy are classified into four main categories:

1. Chronic Hypertension Definition:

• Blood pressure is already high before pregnancy or diagnosed before 20 weeks of gestation.

Why it matters:

• These women are at a higher risk of developing superimposed preeclampsia later in pregnancy.

N.B: If you had high blood pressure before getting pregnant, it’s called chronic hypertension. Doctors will usually monitor you more closely from the start.

2. Gestational Hypertension

Definition:

• High blood pressure that develops after 20 weeks of pregnancy without protein in the urine or signs of organ damage.

Why it matters:

• Often mild, but can progress to preeclampsia, so careful monitoring is essential

3. Preeclampsia and Eclampsia

Preeclampsia:

• Hypertension after 20 weeks plus proteinuria (≥300 mg/24 hours) or signs of organ dysfunction (liver, kidney, brain, platelets).

Eclampsia:

• Preeclampsia with seizures not explained by another cause.

Why it matters:

• Life-threatening for both mother and baby if untreated.

N.B If you’re pregnant and develop sudden swelling, severe headaches, or vision problems, seek medical attention immediately these can be signs of preeclampsia.

4. Superimposed Preeclampsia

Definition: Chronic hypertension with new-onset proteinuria or worsening blood pressure and organ function after 20 weeks.

Risk: Higher likelihood of severe maternal and fetal complications.

Why Treat Hypertension in Pregnancy?

For the Mother:

  • Prevent stroke (especially when BP ≥ 160/110 mmHg)
  • Reduce risk of placental abruption (placenta detaching early)
  • Prevent progression to eclampsia

For the Baby:

  • Maintain good placental blood flow for oxygen and nutrient delivery
  • Reduce risk of fetal growth restriction • Avoid premature birth if possible

When to Start Treatment

Blood Pressure Reading                                                Recommended Action

SBP ≥ 160 or DBP ≥ 110      Urgent treatment with IV or oral rapid-acting medications
Persistent BP > 140/90      Start oral antihypertensives
Mild elevations      Monitor closely, lifestyle advice, possible meds if persisten


Target Range:

Maintain: 140–150 / 90–100 mmHg

Avoid: SBP < 130 or DBP < 80 mmHg (risk of reduced placental perfusion)

First-Line Medications for Hypertension in Pregnancy

Drug                                     Class                            Dosage                                       Notes

Labetalolβ-blocker + α-blockerPO: 100–400 mg BID– TID; IV: 20 mg over 2 min, repeat q10 minPreferred IV agent in severe hypertension
MethyldopaCentral α2-agonistPO: 250–500 mg BID–TIDVery safe in pregnancy, slow onset
Nifedipine (XL)Calcium channel blockerPO: 30–60 mg dailyAvoid sublingual form due to rapid BP drop
HydralazineDirect vasodilatorIV: 5–10 mg q20–30 minUsed for acute BP control

Avoid during pregnancy:

  • CE inhibitors (enalapril, lisinopril)
  • ARBs (losartan, valsartan)
  • Direct renin inhibitors (aliskiren)

These can cause fetal kidney damage and birth defects

Special Situations: Severe Hypertension & Preeclampsia/Eclampsia

When blood pressure is very high or preeclampsia is diagnosed:

Magnesium sulfate → Used for seizure prevention in preeclampsia and treatment in eclampsia.

IV antihypertensives → Rapid control to prevent stroke.

Delivery → The only definitive cure for preeclampsia.

• If ≥37 weeks, delivery is usually recommended.

• If earlier, doctors weigh risks of prematurity vs. maternal complications.

Monitoring and Follow-Up

Mother:

  • Regular BP checks
  • Blood tests: liver enzymes, kidney function, platelets
  • Urine protein monitoring

Baby:

  • Ultrasound for growth
  • Doppler flow studies • Non-stress tests

Lifestyle and Supportive Measures

  • Rest, but avoid strict bed rest unless medically indicated.
  • Balanced diet with adequate protein and calcium.
  • Avoid high-salt processed foods.
  • Regular prenatal visits.

N.B You cannot treat pregnancy hypertension with “natural remedies” alone medications are often necessary for safety.

Possible Complications if Untreated

Maternal

stroke, kidney failure, HELLP syndrome (Hemolysis, Elevated Liver enzymes, Low Platelets), seizures.

Fetal

growth restriction, stillbirth, preterm birth.

References

1. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32443079/

2. NICE Guideline NG133. Hypertension in pregnancy: diagnosis and management. 2019.

3. UpToDate. Management of hypertension in pregnancy. 2025 update.

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