Evidence Review
Copyright ©The Author(s) 2025.
World J Cardiol. Jun 26, 2025; 17(6): 106295
Published online Jun 26, 2025. doi: 10.4330/wjc.v17.i6.106295
Table 1 Physiological changes during pregnancy and delivery
Changes
Variables
First trimester
Second trimester
Third trimester
Delivery
HemodynamicCOSmall increaseModerate increaseModerate increaseSignificant increase
SVRMild decreaseModerate decreaseModerate decrease-
PVRMild decreaseMild decreaseMild decreaseMild increase
HRSmall increaseModerate increaseSignificant increaseVery significant increase
BPMild decreaseMild decreaseNo changeMild increase
WBCWBC count---High
RBCRBC massSmall increaseModerate increaseModerate increase-
Blood volumePlasma volumeModerate increase Moderate increase Very significant increaseExtremely significant increase
Remodeling in heartLV massSmall increaseSmall increaseSmall increase-
Chamber sizes--4-chamber enlargement-
AortaDistensibilityIncrease---
Respiratory minute ventilationO2 saturation1Small increaseModerate increaseModerate increase-
Cardiac biomarkersBNPNo change--Mild increase
cTnNo change---
CK-MBIncrease---
D-dimerSmall increaseModerate increaseSignificant increase -
ECG changesP waveSmall increasePlateau--
Q wave--Prominent Q wave in inferior and anterolateral leads-
QTc--Mild increase -
ST changes---ST depression after cesarean section delivery
ArrhythmiaAPCCommon---
PVCCommon---
Table 2 Common congenital and valvular heart disease encountered in pregnancy
ACHD type
Maternal risk
Fetal risk
Key clinical considerations
ASDLow risk (< 5% arrhythmia, endocarditis, TE)Low fetal mortalityDVT prophylaxis; consider anticoagulation if high-risk; aspirin in select cases
VSDSimilar to ASDLow fetal mortality, CHD recurrence 27%Standard management; low risk overall
Tetralogy of Fallot (repaired)Low cardiac event rate, arrhythmia (2%-6%)Low fetal riskElective PVR if RV dysfunction or dilation
CoAHTN (5%-30%), rare dissectionLow fetal mortality, CHD recurrence 4%Avoid pregnancy in severe CoA (mWHO IV); control BP carefully
Ebstein anomalyHF 3%, arrhythmia 4%Preterm 22%Assess cyanosis, degree of TR, and RV function
d-transposition of great arteries s/p atrial switchHF 10%, arrhythmia 15%Preterm 34%-38%, low CHD recurrenceAssess systemic ventricular function and TR
ccTGA/l-TGAHF 10%, cardiac event 2%Preterm 9%, CHD recurrence 36%Assess systemic RV, TR, and heart block risk
Cyanotic CHD (unrepaired)High maternal risk (HF 19%, TE 3.6%)Fetal mortality 12%, preterm 45%Contraindicated for pregnancy; require thromboembolism prophylaxis, iron support
Eisenmenger syndromeVery high maternal mortality (33%), TE 18%Fetal mortality up to 30%, preterm 65%Pregnancy is contraindicated; PDE-5i/prostanoids may be used, endothelin antagonists contraindicated
Fontan circulationHF 3%-11%, arrhythmia up to 37%Preterm 28%-59%, live birth only 45% of evidence of Fontan failure, postpartum hemorrhage 14%Avoid pregnancy in complicated Fontan; anticoagulation recommended
Severe mitral stenosisMortality 3%, HF 37%, arrhythmia 16%Fetal mortality 6%, preterm 18%Severe MS = mWHO IV (contraindicated); moderate = mWHO III
Severe aortic stenosisMortality 2%, HF 9%, arrhythmia 4%Fetal mortality 5%, preterm 4%Severe symptomatic AS = mWHO IV; assisted delivery may be considered
Severe pulmonary stenosisGenerally well tolerated; worsening function possibleNo significant fetal effects observedMonitor for worsening symptoms; limited data
Moderate/severe AV valve regurgitationMortality < 1%, HF 8%-11%, arrhythmia 6%-8%Fetal mortality 0%-1%, preterm 12%-15%Worse prognosis with pulmonary hypertension or LV dysfunction
Moderate/severe semilunar valve regurgitationMortality < 1%, HF 1%-3%, arrhythmia 0%-3%Fetal mortality 1%-8%, preterm 5%-10%Same considerations as AV regurgitation