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New-onset maternal hypertension is a hallmark of preeclampsia, driven by widespread endothelial dysfunction and systemic vasoconstriction. Here, we set out to create a new ex vivo model using preeclamptic serum to cause injury to the endothelium, mimicking vascular dysfunction in preeclampsia and offering the potential to evaluate candidate therapeutic interventions. Human omental arteries were collected at caesarean section from normotensive pregnant patients at term (n = 9). Serum was collected from pregnancies complicated by preterm preeclampsia (birth < 34 weeks’ gestation, n = 16), term preeclampsia (birth > 37 weeks’ gestation, n = 5), and healthy gestation-matched controls (preterm n = 16, term n = 12). Using wire myography, we performed ex vivo whole vessel assessment where human omental arteries were treated with increasing doses of each serum treatment (2–20%) and vasoreactivity was assessed. All pregnant serum treatments successfully drove vasoconstriction; no significant difference was observed in the degree of vasoconstriction when exposed to preeclamptic or control serum. We further demonstrated the ability of esomeprazole (a candidate therapeutic for preeclampsia; 0.1–100 µM) to drive vasorelaxation of pre-constricted vessels (only with serum from preeclamptic patients). In summary, we describe a novel human physiological model of preeclamptic vascular constriction. We demonstrate its exciting potential to screen drugs for their therapeutic potential as treatment for vasoconstriction induced by preeclampsia.