A comparison between the haemodynamic effects of oral nifedipine and intravenous dihydralazine in patients with severe pre-eclampsia : Journal of Hypertension

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A comparison between the haemodynamic effects of oral nifedipine and intravenous dihydralazine in patients with severe pre-eclampsia

Visser, Willy; Wallenburg, Henk C.S.

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Journal of Hypertension 13(7):p 791-796, July 1995.

Abstract

Objective: 

To compare the effects of a single oral dose of nifedipine with those of intravenous dihydralazine on central haemodynamics in pregnant women with severe pre-eclampsia.

Design: 

A prospective comparative study.

Setting: 

The High Risk Obstetric Unit, University Hospital Rotterdam Dijkzigt, Rotterdam.

Subjects: 

Twenty patients with severe pre-eclampsia between 27 and 35 weeks gestation with normal cardiac filling pressures and without fetal distress.

Interventions: 

A pulmonary artery thermodilution catheter and a radial artery line were placed. Ten patients chewed a 10-mg capsule of nifedipine and 10 patients received dihydralazine by intravenous infusion at a rate of 1–3 mg/h. Arterial pressures, heart rate, cardiac output and pulmonary capillary wedge pressure were determined before and after drug administration. Fetal condition was continuously monitored by cardiotocography.

Results: 

The reduction in arterial blood pressure obtained with both drugs was similar, and was associated with a similar rise in heart rate and cardiac output and a similar reduction in systemic vascular resistance. Pulmonary capillary wedge pressures decreased significantly less with nifedipine than with dihydralazine. Signs of fetal distress occurred in none of the nifedipine-treated patients, but in five of the patients treated with dihydralazine.

Conclusion: 

From the haemodynamic viewpoint nifedipine seems to be a useful agent in the treatment of hypertensive emergencies in pregnancy.

© Lippincott-Raven Publishers.

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