Summarising maternal and fetal complications of severe pre-eclampsia
Asphyxia is pronounced 'ass-fix-ee-ah'.
'Acute' refers to a condition that begins suddenly and rapidly becomes very serious.
Common complications of severe pre-eclampsia in the mother and the fetus.
Maternal complications | Fetal complications |
---|---|
Eclampsia | Placental abruption |
Intracranial haemorrhage (bleeding inside the skull) | Intrauterine asphyxia (severe shortage of oxygen in the uterus) |
Anaemia | IUGR (intrauterine growth restriction) |
Low platelet count, poor blood clotting and risk of bleeding | Premature delivery |
Acute kidney failure | IUFD (intrauterine fetal death) |
Acute liver failure, maybe even liver rupture | Respiratory distress after birth(early neonatal asphyxia) |
Fluid in the lungs (pulmonary oedema) | Mental retardation |
Heart failure | |
Temporary total blindness |
Last modified: Wednesday, 16 July 2014, 7:00 PM