Associate Professor HA Tran, author of the article, comments:
In pre-eclampsia the detection of hypertension is of utmost importance and blood pressure needs to be rigorously controlled. The presence of proteinuria and oedema is less critical but will further assist in arriving at the correct diagnosis. Although eclampsia can occur in the absence of the 'triad', alternative differential neurological diagnoses need to be considered.
While the clinical utility of 'routine' urinalysis may not be as important in the diagnosis of pre-eclampsia, it is sometimes useful in detecting asymptomatic bacteriuria and glycosuria. Bacteriuria confers an increased risk of pyelonephritis and prematurity,2 and glycosuria may identify unsuspected diabetes other than gestational diabetes. Interventions for both of these conditions can result in better outcomes.2,3 It is of additional interest that the current British guideline for antenatal care recommends that 'whenever blood pressure is measured in pregnancy a urine sample should be tested at the same time for proteinuria'.4 The decision to discontinue this practice in low-risk patients is then probably a function of cost versus benefit.