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  2. Tramadol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tramadol

    Tramadol and desmetramadol may be quantified in blood, plasma, serum, or saliva to monitor for abuse, confirm a diagnosis of poisoning or assist in the forensic investigation of a sudden death. Most commercial opiate immunoassay screening tests do not cross-react significantly with tramadol or its major metabolites, so chromatographic ...

  3. Study Finds High Blood Pressure Among Pregnant People Is ...

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    A doctor diagnoses “chronic hypertension in pregnancy” if someone has a reading of at least 130/80 mm Hg before pregnancy or 20 weeks of pregnancy. Chronic high blood pressure can raise the ...

  4. List of side effects of tramadol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_side_effects_of...

    Rare (0.01–0.1% incidence) Bradycardia. Hypertension (high blood pressure) Allergic reactions (e.g. dyspnoea (shortness of breath), bronchospasm, wheezing, angioneurotic oedema) Anaphylaxis. Changes in appetite. Paraesthesia (pins and needles) Hallucinations. Tremor.

  5. Hypertensive disease of pregnancy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypertensive_disease_of...

    Although many pregnant women with high blood pressure have healthy babies without serious problems, high blood pressure can be dangerous for both the mother and baby. Women with pre-existing, or chronic, high blood pressure are more likely to have certain complications during pregnancy than those with normal blood pressure.

  6. Opioids and pregnancy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opioids_and_pregnancy

    Opioids can cross both the placental and blood-brain barriers, which poses risks to fetuses and newborns exposed to these drugs before birth. This exposure to opioids during pregnancy can lead to potential obstetric complications, including spontaneous abortion, abruption of the placenta, pre-eclampsia, prelabor rupture of membranes, and fetal death.

  7. In pregnancy, the brain changes in remarkable ways, a new ...

    www.aol.com/pregnancy-brain-changes-remarkable...

    During pregnancy, the female body goes through a variety of physical changes, including additional blood in the body, faster heart rate, increased work on the kidneys, deeper breathing, and ...

  8. Drugs in pregnancy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drugs_in_pregnancy

    Anti-hypertensives are blood pressure medications used to treat high blood pressure in pregnant women. [39] This class of medication is commonly used to treat problems such as heart failure, heart attack, and kidney failure. [39] Caution must be exercised with the use of various hypertensive agents for the treatment of blood pressure. [58]

  9. Frozen embryo transfers ‘linked to higher blood pressure ...

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    Conceiving a baby using a frozen embryo may raise the mother’s risk of high blood pressure disorders by up to 74%, new research suggests. The findings, published in the journal Hypertension also ...