All but three of the 270 women surviving eclampsia at the Margaret Hague Maternity Hospital in the period 1931 through 1951 were traced to 1973-74. Seventy-six have died and 13 were not re-examined. In white women having eclampsia in the first pregnancy carried to viability the remote mortality rate is not increased over that in unselected women; in white women having eclampsia as mulitparas and in all black women the remote mortality rate is from 2 to 5 times the expected numbers. Primiparous eclamptic women are not different from women matched for age, in several epidemiologic studies, in the prevalence of hypertension or in the frequency distributions of systolic and diastolic blood pressures. There is, however, a considerable increase in the prevalence of hypertension among women having had eclampsia as multiparas and that has accounted for their increased remote death rates. The prevalence of diabetes, developing many years after eclampsia is 2.5 times the expected rate in primiparous and about 4 times the expected rate among multiparous eclamptic women. Eclampsia neither is a sign of latent essential hypertension nor causes hypertension. Hypertensive pregnancies following eclampsia indicate the probabilty of later chronic hypertension, but do not cause it.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0002-9378(76)90168-xDOI Listing

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