“…During physiological gestation, cells of the developing cytotrophoblast penetrate the wall of the uterus and cause the remodeling of spiral arteries, which enables normal placental development. In the instances of disturbed trophoblast invasion, spiral arteries remain narrow, highly resistant, which greatly limits the blood flow through developing placenta [1,2,4,6]. This initiates a cascade of events leading to the disease that includes significant alterations of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS) [1,7,8].…”