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Body changes during pregnancy

2000 
: Pregnancy induces numerous changes in the physiology of the woman. Those changes are necessary for the embryo and fetus to have a normal growth, and for the woman to adapt to that physiologic event. A 50% raised cardiac flow is the consequence of increased systolic flow and cardiac frequency. Blood volume is about 40% larger than in non-pregnant woman. It is the consequence of enlargement of the plasmatic volume (50%), and the red cells mass (30%). Those different changes explain the physiologic anemia of pregnancy. The main part of the blood volume increase corresponds to an enlargement of the venous system, but without any change of the central venous pressure. Arterial pressure remains unchanged throughout the pregnancy, or sometimes gently decreases (10%). Those changes are more important during an effort, particularly during the labor. Increase of cerebral blood flow (as a consequence of a raised cardiac flow) is limited by the cerebral autoregulation. As a consequence, there is no evidence for dramatic cerebral hemodynamic changes during pregnancy. Nevertheless, autoregulation is less effective for arterial pressure over than 150 mmHg, what can induce an hemorrhagic stroke. Blood levels of steroid (progesterone, oestrogens) and peptidic (HCG, HPL) hormones are increased. Oestrogens are said to make capillary fragile, and progesterone is responsible for the enlargement of the venous system. In order to prevent an hemorrhagic accident, pregnancy induces a lack of fibrinolysis, and an excess in coagulation. The consequence is the ability of the pregnant and post-partum woman to develop venous thrombosis.
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