Abstract
Pregnancy and delivery involve dynamic alterations in many physiological systems. However, the physiological dynamics during pregnancy and after delivery have not been systematically analyzed at high temporal resolution in a large human population. Here we present the dynamics of 76 lab tests based on a cross-sectional analysis of roughly 41 million measurements from over 300,000 pregnancies. We analyzed each test at weekly intervals from 20 weeks preconception to 80 weeks postpartum, providing detailed temporal profiles. About half of the tests take three months to a year to return to baseline during postpartum, highlighting the physiological load of childbirth. The precision of the data revealed effects of preconception supplements, overshoots after delivery and intricate temporal responses to changes in blood volume and renal filtration rate. Pregnancy complications – gestational diabetes, pre-eclampsia and postpartum hemorrhage – showed distinct dynamical changes. These results provide a comprehensive dynamic portrait of the systems physiology of pregnancy.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
Footnotes
We accidently uploaded a pending paper after review and adjustments made by the journal. The attached version is the original submitted to the journal