Abstract-A considerable proportion of pregnant women develop high blood pressure in pregnancy. Although it is assumed that this condition subsides after pregnancy, many of these women develop the metabolic syndrome later in life and are at increased risk to develop coronary heart disease. Atherosclerosis development is considered in between risk factors and occurrence of vascular symptoms. We set out to cross-sectionally study the relation of high blood pressure during pregnancy with risk of coronary calcification. The study population was composed 491 healthy postmenopausal women selected from a population-based cohort study. Information on high blood pressure during pregnancy was obtained using a questionnaire. ypertensive disorders are common complications of pregnancy and rank among the leading causes of maternal and perinatal morbidity and mortality worldwide. 1-3 Depending on the definitions used and the populations studied, high blood pressure is reported to affect 2% to 35% of all pregnancies. 4 In the various classification schemes proposed, hypertension specific for and secondary to pregnancy is referred to as gestational hypertension, pregnancy-induced hypertension, or, when proteinuria is observed as well, pre-eclampsia. Pre-eclampsia, in particular, is associated with an increased risk of adverse pregnancy outcome for both the mother and the fetus.During the last decade, evidence has accumulated that hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, pre-eclampsia, in particular, are associated with future hypertension and cardiovascular events. Pre-eclampsia and cardiovascular disease (CVD) share chronic hypertension, increased total cholesterol, decreased insulin sensitivity, and increased body mass index as common risk factors. 5 Large epidemiological studies have demonstrated that women who have had pre-eclampsia are at high (2-fold) risk to develop CVD in later life. 6 -11 Many of the women who have had pre-eclampsia in pregnancy and who have no signs of clinical disease after pregnancy exhibit the phenotype of the metabolic syndrome (overweight, latent hypertension, dyslipidemia, insulin resistance, and hyperhomocysteinemia) and impaired endothelial function at 3 to 12 months postpartum. [12][13][14][15] Apparently, exposure of the women with this phenotype to the additional metabolic and cardiovascular challenges of pregnancy induces transient clinical disease (ie, pre-eclampsia) that subsides after pregnancy but is likely to re-emerge later in life as CVD. 16 -18 This knowledge has lead to the novel concept of pregnancy as a cardiovascular challenge test with the development of high blood pressure or pre-eclampsia as a marker of increased risk to develop atherosclerosis and vascular events in the future. To further expand on this notion toward the development of atherosclerosis, we studied the relation of high blood pressure during pregnancy with coronary atherosclerosis. Increased coronary calcium is indeed one of the strongest predictors of