Recent Articles



































Eclampsia



         


Eclampsia is a serious complication of pregnancy and is characterised by convulsions. Usually eclampsia occurs after the onset of pre-eclampsia though sometimes no pre-eclamptic symptoms are recognisable. The convulsions may appear before, during or after labour, though cases of eclampsia after just 20 weeks of pregnancy have been recorded.

[Top]

Signs and symptoms

The majority of cases are heralded by pregnancy-induced hypertension and proteinuria but the only true sign of eclampsia is an eclamptic convulsion, of which there are four stages. Patients with edema and oliguria may develop renal failure or pulmonary oedema.

[Top]

Epidemiology

It can be fatal to both mother and fetus, with just under one in 50 women dying and one in 14 of their babies also not surviving.

[Top]

Bibliography






  View Live Article   This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License