| Abstract |
[Abstract] Objective To explore the risk factors of postpartum depression in pregnant women with hypertension during pregnancy. Methods A total of 100 pregnant women with hypertension during pregnancy from December 2014 to January 2020 were selected as the study subjects. The occurrence situation of postpartum depression were evaluated, and set it as the depression group and the normal group. The medical records of perinatal pregnancy-related hypertension in the two groups were compared. The risk factors for postpartum depression were investigated. Results A total of 100 cases of pregnancy-induced hypertension, 21 cases of postpartum depression in pregnant women, the incidence rate was 21.00%. There were statistically significant differences between the depression group and the normal group in attack gestational weeks, combined prenatal complications, adverse labor outcomes, postpartum hypertension, blood pressure control effect, and family history of hypertension (P<0.05). There was no significant difference in the types of diseases, delivery methods, and ages between the two groups (P>0.05). Multivariate analysis showed that the gestational age was less than 28 weeks, adverse birth outcomes, postpartum hypertension, poor blood pressure control effect, and combined prenatal complications were independent risk factors for postpartum depression. Conclusion Maternal postpartum depression has a higher incidence of hypertension during pregnancy, and affected by factors such as attack pregnancy week and blood pressure control effects, it should focus on high-risk groups and take targeted measures as early as possible to prevent postpartum depression.Key words Hypertension during Pregnancy; Maternal; Postpartum Depression; Risk Factors
|