Many women feel safe once their baby is born. They think the hard part is over. But a new review shows the heart risk may have started earlier than we thought.
Pre-eclampsia is a serious condition that happens during pregnancy. It causes high blood pressure and protein in the urine. It can make a mother feel very sick.
Doctors know these women are at higher risk for heart disease later. But we do not have clear rules on when to check them. Many women wait years before getting tested. This delay might let problems grow silently.
The surprising shift
For a long time, doctors waited until years after birth to screen for heart issues. We assumed the body would heal itself quickly. But this study changes that view.
But here is the twist. The signs of heart trouble appear right during pregnancy. They stay there for months and even years after delivery. Waiting to check a woman's heart health might be too late.
What scientists didn't expect
Think of your arteries like garden hoses. Over time, they can get clogged with plaque. This is called atherosclerosis. It happens slowly and often without pain.
In women with pre-eclampsia, these hoses get clogged faster. The study looked at three types of checks. One measures the thickness of the neck arteries. Another looks for calcium in the heart arteries. The third checks blood pressure in the legs.
All three methods showed the same thing. Women with this pregnancy complication had thicker artery walls. They also had more calcium buildup. This means the damage starts early and lasts a long time.
The study in simple terms
Researchers looked at 35 different studies. Together, they included over 20,000 women. About 3,400 of these women had pre-eclampsia.
The team compared women with the condition to those without it. They used special tests to look for hidden heart disease. These tests are standard in cardiology clinics today.
The results were clear and consistent. Women with pre-eclampsia had thicker artery walls during pregnancy. The difference was noticeable even before the baby was born.
This extra thickness did not go away quickly. It stayed high for 12 months after birth. It remained elevated for years in many cases. The risk of having calcium buildup in the heart arteries was also much higher.
This doesn't mean this treatment is available yet.
The study does not offer a new drug. It offers a new plan for checking patients. Doctors should consider testing these women sooner. Early detection allows for better lifestyle changes or medication.
If you had pre-eclampsia, talk to your doctor about heart checks. Do not wait for symptoms to appear. Heart disease often has no warning signs until it is serious.
You can lower your risk with healthy habits. Eat well, move your body, and manage stress. But knowing your status is the first step. Ask your provider if you need a screening now.
The limitations
This review combined data from many studies. Some studies were small. Most looked at women in specific regions. We do not know if results apply to every single person.
Also, these are observational findings. They show a link, not a cause. We cannot say the condition caused the heart issue directly. But the connection is strong enough to worry about.
Doctors will likely update their guidelines soon. We may see new recommendations for routine screening. These checks could become standard care for women with this history.
More research will follow. Scientists want to find the best time for testing. They also want to know which women need the most help. The goal is to keep women healthy for life.