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What is Preeclampsia?

Medic points out specific signs that patients should look out for in case they suspect they have the condition.

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by ELISHA SINGIRA

Health20 June 2025 - 08:29
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In Summary


  • A condition that happens during pregnancy which is high blood pressure where the blood pressure readings are above 140, the top value, and the lower value above 90 (140/90) mostly happening after the 20th week of pregnancy

Dr Joan Okemo, Consultant Obstetrician Gynaecologist at Aga Khan University Hospital Nairobi.



Pregnancy is a delicate moment for mothers. They are most susceptible to serious complications, some which are fatal. One of the major problems that usually develop or manifest during pregnancy is preeclampsia, a condition associated with high blood pressure.

According to the World Health Organization, it affects between 5.6 per cent and 6.5 per cent of pregnancies in Kenya. It is the third leading cause of maternal deaths, accounting for 20 per cent of maternal mortality in Kenya.

Dr Joan Okemo, consultant obstetrician gynaecologist at Aga Khan University Hospital Nairobi, says preeclampsia happens during pregnancy when the top value of blood pressure readings is above 140, and the lower value above 90 (140/90), mostly after the week 20 of pregnancy.

However, there must be a combination of blood pressure together with protein in urine for a diagnosis of preeclampsia to be made.

“We have two definitions of preeclampsia where there's either high blood pressure together with what we call protein in urine, or high blood pressure together with end-organ damage evidence,” Dr Okemo says.

She points out specific signs that patients should look out for in case they suspect they have the condition.

She says: “Unfortunately, sometimes pressure may rise and someone doesn't know. By the time you start having symptoms and signs, it already means it's in a severe form. We have to generally classify it into two things, either preeclampsia with severe features or preeclampsia without severe features.”

“The one without severe features means only the pressure is high, but you don't have any symptoms or signs that would make you think that you have high blood pressure. So, it's something that you'll probably be in a clinic, you've come for a routine check-up, they do a blood pressure and they see that your blood pressure is high.”

Some of the most common symptoms in severe preeclampsia include severe headache that does not go away even with taking painkillers, blurry vision and sometimes gaps in your vision, severe heartburn or pain in your upper abdomen and swelling in your lower limps.

Sometimes it can present with severe heartburn or pain in your upper abdomen. Sometimes it's swelling up too much, even in your upper limbs. Swelling in the lower limbs is considered normal, but if it's too sudden and too much, it may also be a sign of high blood pressure. 

If preeclampsia becomes severe, it can also mean the mother needs to deliver the baby early.

“If the preeclampsia develops and it's the severe form, you may need to deliver the mum. Unfortunately, sometimes it may happen before the baby’s birth time leading to prematurity, preterm delivery, which would lead to admission in ICU for the newborns, or even the HDU. The babies are not where they are supposed to be because their growth was strained as well,” Dr Okemo adds.

For mothers, preeclampsia can also be dangerous. “It could be so bad that you can't save a life, especially with little adults, which sometimes creates a need to do a cesarean section if you have to save the mother or the baby urgently, and that becomes the quickest way to do that,” she says.

According to Dr Okemo, diagnosing preeclampsia is not complicated. All the women need to do is to visit a clinic on regular checkup then their BP is checked before a urine test is done to check the availability of blood and proteins in urine.

Treatment depends on how bad the preeclampsia is. If it is just a simple high blood pressure without the severe features, then mostly all you want to do is to manage the pressure.

“Giving antihypertensive medication and to also do some tests to check where we are at in terms of severity, even in the effects to the baby. Doing something as simple as an ultrasound to check the growth of the baby and whether the baby is affected or not is very important,” she explains.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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