This site is intended for healthcare professionals

Go to /sign-in page

You can view 5 more pages before signing in

Go to /pro/cpd-dashboard page

This page is worth 0.05 CPD credits. CPD dashboard

Go to /account/subscription-details page

This page is worth 0.05 CPD credits. Upgrade to Pro

Postnatal investigation, monitoring and treatment (including after discharge from critical care)

Last reviewed dd mmm yyyy. Last edited dd mmm yyyy

Authoring team

Blood pressure

  • in women with pre-eclampsia who did not take antihypertensive treatment and have given birth, measure blood pressure:
    • at least four times a day while the woman is an inpatient
    • at least once between day 3 and day 5 after birth
    • on alternate days until normal if blood pressure was abnormal on days 3-5

  • in women with pre-eclampsia who did not take antihypertensive treatment and have given birth
    • start antihypertensive treatment if blood pressure is 150/100 mmHg or higher

  • in women with pre-eclampsia who have given birth enquire about severe headache and epigastric pain each time blood pressure is measured

  • in women with pre-eclampsia who took antihypertensive treatment and have given birth, measure blood pressure:
    • at least four times a day while the woman is an inpatient
    • every 1-2 days for up to 2 weeks after transfer to community care until the woman is off treatment and has no hypertension

  • for women with pre-eclampsia who have taken antihypertensive treatment and have given birth:
    • continue antenatal antihypertensive treatment
    • consider reducing antihypertensive treatment if their blood pressure falls below 140/90 mmHg
    • reduce antihypertensive treatment if their blood pressure falls below 130/80 mmHg

  • if a woman has taken methyldopa to treat pre-eclampsia, stop within 2 days of birth and change to an alternative treatment if necessary

  • offer women with pre-eclampsia who have given birth transfer to community care if all of the following criteria have been met:
    • no symptoms of pre-eclampsia
    • blood pressure, with or without treatment, is 150/100 mmHg or lower
    • blood test results are stable or improving

  • women who have pre-eclampsia and are still on antihypertensive treatment 2 weeks after transfer to community care should be offered a medical review

  • offer women who have had pre-eclampsia and who remain on antihypertensive treatment, a medical review with their GP or specialist 2 weeks after transfer to community care

  • offer all women who have had pre-eclampsia a medical review with their GP or specialist 6-8 weeks after the birth

Haematological and biochemical monitoring

  • in women who have pre-eclampsia with mild or moderate hypertension, or after step-down from critical care:
    • measure platelet count, transaminases and serum creatinine 48-72 hours after birth or step-down
    • do not repeat platelet count, transaminases or serum creatinine measurements if results are normal at 48-72 hours

  • if biochemical and haematological indices are outside the reference range in women with pre-eclampsia who have given birth, repeat platelet count, transaminases and serum creatinine measurements as clinically indicated until results return to normal

  • in women with pre-eclampsia who have given birth, carry out a urinary reagent-strip test at the postnatal review (6-8 weeks after the birth)

  • offer women who had pre-eclampsia and still have proteinuria (1+ or more) at 6-8 weeks after the birth, a further review with their GP or specialist at 3months after the birth to assess kidney function

  • in women with pre-eclampsia who have given birth and have stepped down from critical care level 2, do not measure fluid balance if creatinine is within the normal range

  • consider referring women with an abnormal kidney function assessment at 3 months for a specialist kidney assessment in line with the NICE guideline on chronic kidney disease in adults

Reference:


Related pages

Create an account to add page annotations

Annotations allow you to add information to this page that would be handy to have on hand during a consultation. E.g. a website or number. This information will always show when you visit this page.