Greater gestational weight gain (GWG) may be a risk factor for peripartum cardiomyopathy (PPCM). In counseling, women with a prior history of PPCM associated with greater GWG should be advised to avoid excessive GWG in subsequent pregnancies. The third pregnancy occurred in a 36-year-old Japanese woman with height of 1.48 m and left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) of 62% following the first and second pregnancies complicated with PPCM and spontaneous abortion, respectively. She exhibited GWG of 14.7 kg (from 37.0 to 51.7 kg) and normal or nearly normal plasma B-type natriuretic peptide levels and LVEF (>55%) throughout the current pregnancy. In her first pregnancy at the age of 33 years, extraordinary GWG of 30 kg (from 38.5 to 69.1 kg) preceded PPCM with nadir LVEF of 22% at 6 weeks postpartum followed by more than 18-month LVEF of <55%.
Ayako Sakamoto, Takeshi Umazume, Mamoru Morikawa, Satoshi Ishikawa, Takahiro Yamada1, Satoshi Yamada and Hisanori Minakami
Critical Care Obstetrics and Gynecology received 148 citations as per google scholar report