Plain-English translation of NCT06122220 on ClinicalTrials.gov ↗ · Source last updated · Translation generated · How we translate trials
This study doesn't follow the usual testing phases — it may be an observational study or a different type of research.
Pre-eclampsia is a serious condition that develops during pregnancy, causing dangerously high blood pressure and potentially harming both mother and baby. This study is looking at whether measuring the optic nerve (the nerve behind your eye) using ultrasound, combined with special blood tests that measure angiogenic factors, can help doctors more accurately diagnose pre-eclampsia and predict which women are at highest risk for serious complications.
Currently, doctors struggle to quickly identify which pregnant women with high blood pressure will develop severe, life-threatening complications. This trial exists because adding these two new measurements could help doctors make faster, more confident decisions about whether a pregnancy needs to be delivered early or can safely continue.
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If you join this study, you will have an ultrasound measurement taken of the optic nerve behind your eye—a quick, painless procedure. You will also have blood drawn to measure special proteins related to blood vessel growth. Doctors will compare these measurements between pregnant women with severe high blood pressure and those with normal pregnancies to see which tests best predict complications.
AI-generated summary from trial data · Jun 2, 2026 · Not medical advice
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