High-Risk Pregnancy Care in Ahmedabad
A high-risk pregnancy needs a structured, anticipatory approach — not anxiety. At Balaji Horizon, Dr. Shreya Iyengar Patel leads the maternal-fetal medicine programme with FIGO and ISUOG-aligned screening, AI-based 3D/4D sonography, dedicated risk-category protocols, and integrated obstetric care from preconception through postpartum.
What is a “High-Risk” Pregnancy?
A pregnancy is termed high-risk when maternal, fetal, or pregnancy-specific factors raise the probability of complications above the population baseline. The label is clinical, not catastrophic — most high-risk pregnancies result in healthy mothers and babies when managed with the right surveillance and timing. The failure mode is unrecognised risk, not the risk itself.
Risk can be identified before pregnancy (chronic conditions, prior obstetric history, age, IVF conception) or emerge during pregnancy (gestational diabetes, preeclampsia, fetal growth restriction, placental abnormalities). Different risk categories require different surveillance frequencies, different test panels, and different delivery planning.
The single most important principle: risk-appropriate care. Over-surveillance creates anxiety and unnecessary intervention; under-surveillance misses preventable adverse outcomes. The balance is calibrated to each pregnancy.
Categories of High-Risk Pregnancy
High-risk pregnancies are not all the same. Each category brings specific risks and specific surveillance needs.
Advanced Maternal Age (≥35 years)
Higher risk of chromosomal abnormalities (NT scan + cell-free DNA screening), gestational diabetes, hypertensive disorders, placental complications. Surveillance intensified after 32–34 weeks. Most pregnancies are entirely uneventful with proper monitoring.
IVF / ART Pregnancy
Slightly elevated risk of preterm birth, hypertensive disorders, and placental issues — much of which is mediated by underlying infertility cause and maternal age rather than the IVF procedure itself. First-trimester support protocols, careful early growth monitoring, and structured antenatal pathway.
Hypertensive Disorders & Preeclampsia Risk
First-trimester preeclampsia screening (FMF protocol — mean arterial pressure, uterine artery Doppler, PlGF), low-dose aspirin prophylaxis where indicated, BP monitoring, growth surveillance. Most preeclampsia is preventable with early identification and timely aspirin initiation before 16 weeks.
Gestational Diabetes (GDM)
Universal OGTT screening at 24–28 weeks (earlier if high risk). Dietary, exercise, and pharmacologic management as needed. Growth scans tailored to glycaemic control. Most well-controlled GDM pregnancies deliver healthy babies at term.
Multiple Pregnancy (Twins / Triplets)
Chorionicity determination in first trimester (critical for risk stratification). MCDA twins require fortnightly scans after 16 weeks (TTTS surveillance). Higher risk of preterm birth, growth discordance, hypertensive disorders. Specialised delivery planning.
Recurrent Pregnancy Loss / Prior Adverse Outcome
Preconception workup (parental karyotype, thrombophilia, uterine cavity, immune evaluation in selected cases), risk-stratified antenatal pathway, dedicated emotional support throughout. Risk of recurrence varies by underlying cause.
Pre-existing Medical Conditions
Diabetes, hypertension, thyroid disease, autoimmune disease, cardiac disease, epilepsy, mental health conditions. Preconception optimisation when possible. Medication review for teratogenicity. Multi-specialty co-management as needed.
Fetal Concerns Identified Antenatally
Structural anomaly on anomaly scan, growth restriction, abnormal Doppler, marker on first-trimester combined screen. Detailed fetal medicine review, MFM consultation, individualised surveillance and delivery planning.
Dr. Shreya Iyengar Patel — Maternal-Fetal Medicine
High-risk pregnancy management requires both technical mastery of fetal imaging and the communication skill to discuss complex findings with clarity and compassion. Dr. Shreya leads the fetal medicine and high-risk pregnancy programme, with FIGO and ISUOG-aligned practice and a focus on accurate, honest, patient-centred communication.
“A high-risk label is not a verdict — it is an invitation to be more attentive. The job is to surveille appropriately, intervene when truly needed, and reassure with evidence the rest of the time.” — Dr. Shreya Iyengar Patel
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Balaji Horizon Women’s Hospital · Satyamev Eminence, Science City Road, Ahmedabad 380060 · Mon–Sat · 11:00 AM – 8:00 PM · +91 97234 31544
Diagnostic & Surveillance Protocols
High-risk pregnancy surveillance is structured around three rhythms: first-trimester risk screening, mid-trimester anatomic and growth assessment, and third-trimester surveillance of growth, well-being, and timing of delivery.
First-trimester combined screen
NT scan + maternal serum (PAPP-A, free βhCG) at 11–13⁺⁶ weeks. Identifies chromosomal risk and predicts preeclampsia, preterm birth, and FGR risk using the FMF algorithm.
Cell-free DNA / NIPT
Highly sensitive screening for common chromosomal anomalies. Recommended for high-risk patients or those preferring earlier, more accurate screening over routine combined screen.
Anomaly scan (18–22 weeks)
Detailed fetal anatomy assessment per ISUOG standards. Identifies structural anomalies, soft markers, placental position, cervical length.
Fetal echocardiography
Detailed cardiac assessment when indicated: diabetic pregnancy, family history of CHD, abnormal findings on routine scan, IVF pregnancy, advanced maternal age.
Growth scans (28, 32, 36 weeks)
Tracks fetal growth velocity, amniotic fluid, biophysical profile, placental function. Frequency intensified in growth restriction, twins, or other concerns.
Doppler studies
Umbilical artery, MCA, ductus venosus Doppler — for growth restriction, hypertensive disorders, twin surveillance, anaemia screening.
Cervical length surveillance
Transvaginal cervical length at 16–24 weeks for women with prior preterm birth, short cervix history, or twin pregnancy. Identifies short cervix needing intervention.
Invasive diagnostics
CVS (11–13 weeks) or amniocentesis (15+ weeks) for confirmation of suspected anomaly. Done only with clear indication, informed consent, and complete counselling.
Delivery Planning in High-Risk Pregnancy
Timing and mode of delivery are calibrated to risk category, fetal well-being, and maternal status. Most high-risk pregnancies still deliver vaginally at term — the high-risk label does not automatically mean caesarean section or preterm delivery.
Term planning
For most uncomplicated high-risk pregnancies, planned delivery at 39–40 weeks. Earlier in selected conditions (uncontrolled diabetes, preeclampsia, growth restriction).
Mode of delivery
Vaginal delivery preferred where safe. Caesarean for clear obstetric indications. VBAC counselling for prior caesarean with appropriate criteria.
In-hospital monitoring
Continuous fetal heart rate monitoring, maternal vital surveillance, anaesthesia and neonatal team availability for higher-risk deliveries.
Postpartum surveillance
Continued maternal monitoring for hypertensive disorders, glucose normalisation in GDM, mental health screening, breastfeeding support, contraception counselling.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does “high-risk” mean something will definitely go wrong?
No. It means the probability of certain complications is higher than population baseline, and that more careful surveillance is appropriate. Most high-risk pregnancies result in healthy mothers and babies when managed properly.
I’m 38 and pregnant. Is this automatically high-risk?
Age ≥35 places a pregnancy in the higher-risk category — but the actual risk depends on overall health, prior obstetric history, and pregnancy course. Many such pregnancies are entirely uneventful with appropriate surveillance.
Will I need more scans than a normal pregnancy?
Yes — surveillance is more frequent in high-risk pregnancy. Exact frequency depends on risk category. The goal is to detect changes early so interventions can be timed correctly.
Can preeclampsia be prevented?
In high-risk women identified at first-trimester screen, low-dose aspirin started before 16 weeks reduces preeclampsia risk by approximately 60–70% (ASPRE trial). This is one of the most evidence-supported preventive measures in obstetrics.
Is IVF pregnancy more risky?
Slightly elevated risk for preterm birth and hypertensive disorders, but much of this reflects underlying infertility cause and maternal age rather than the IVF procedure itself. With structured surveillance, outcomes are excellent.
Will I need a caesarean section?
Not automatically. Caesarean is performed for clear obstetric indications. Most high-risk pregnancies deliver vaginally when safe. Mode of delivery is decided closer to term based on maternal and fetal status.
What should I bring to my first pregnancy consultation?
Prior pregnancy records (deliveries, miscarriages, complications), current medications, medical and surgical history, recent test results (HbA1c, TSH, etc.), and any prior ultrasound reports. The more complete the history, the more accurate the risk stratification.
Continue Reading
Advanced obstetric ultrasonography
Pregnancy Care →
Trimester-wise antenatal pathway
Antenatal Care →
Standard ANC schedule and tests
Dr. Shreya Patel →
Fetal medicine specialist profile
IVF Programme →
IVF-to-pregnancy continuity of care
Postnatal Care →
Postpartum surveillance and support
Dr. Priyadatt Patel
Senior Gynecologist · Advanced Laparoscopic Surgeon · IVF and Endometriosis Programme Lead
MS OBGyn · Pregnancy Care · Advanced Gynaecological Ultrasound · Fertility Preservation
ESHRE / ESGE / AAGL / ASRM guideline-aligned practice. 3D Karl Storz precision technique. Fertility-preservation-first philosophy. Evidence-based decisions, honest counselling, long-term outcomes orientation.
Science City Road, Ahmedabad 380060
Mon–Sat 11:00–20:00 · +91 97234 31544
Naranpura, Ahmedabad
Mon–Sat 08:30–10:30 · +91 70460 02566
