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Maternal physiological adaptation to pregnancy plays an important role in the smooth progress of the pregnancy and the healthy growth of the fetus. This physiological adaptation takes place at the level of several organs, including the kidney. Physiological changes during a normal pregnancy take place at the anatomical, glomerular and tubular level.
In the event of pre-existing kidney damage (glomerular and tubular diseases, stone disease, high blood pressure (hypertension) etc...) these adaptations will not be optimal. This will have implications for:
Some maternal complications have long-term implications: preeclampsia is associated with a high risk of subsequent cardiovascular and renal complications. Pregnancies in these patients are high-risk pregnancies and require specialized management by an experienced group of gynecologists and nephrologists.
The creation of a retrospective and prospective register by collecting demographic, clinical, biological, radiological and genetic data concerning patients at each consultation within the CHU Brugmann Hospital will allow:
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Sex
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Inclusion criteria
Pre-conception consultations
Woman of childbearing age with:
Peri-gravid consultations
Pregnant women with
Postpartum consultations
Postpartum women with
Exclusion criteria
Male patients Menopausal patients
600 participants in 1 patient group
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Christelle Fosso
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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