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BMJ 2005;331 (15 October), doi:10.1136/bmj.331.7521.0-b
Increased risk for pre-eclampsia is genetically transmitted from both mother and father. Studying a population based cohort, Skjærven and colleagues (p 877) examined almost 500 000 mother-offspring units and almost 300 000 father-offspring units from the Norwegian medical birth registry. Women born from pre-eclamptic pregnancies were more than twice as likely to develop pre-eclampsia themselves than other women, while the corresponding increased risk in pregnancies fathered by a man who was born from a pre-eclamptic pregnancy was 50%. Positive family history predicts more severe pre-eclampsia.
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Credit: HENNY ALLIS/SPL
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