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      Detecting open spina bifida at the 11-13-week scan by assessing intracranial translucency and the posterior brain region: mid-sagittal or axial plane?

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      Ultrasound in Obstetrics & Gynecology
      Wiley-Blackwell

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          Sonographic examination of the fetal central nervous system: guidelines for performing the 'basic examination' and the 'fetal neurosonogram'.

          (2006)
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            Assessment of intracranial translucency (IT) in the detection of spina bifida at the 11-13-week scan.

            Prenatal diagnosis of open spina bifida is carried out by ultrasound examination in the second trimester of pregnancy. The diagnosis is suspected by the presence of a 'lemon-shaped' head and a 'banana-shaped' cerebellum, thought to be consequences of caudal displacement of the hindbrain. The aim of the study was to determine whether in fetuses with spina bifida this displacement of the brain is evident from the first trimester of pregnancy. In women undergoing routine ultrasound examination at 11-13 weeks' gestation as part of screening for chromosomal abnormalities, a mid-sagittal view of the fetal face was obtained to measure nuchal translucency thickness and assess the nasal bone. In this view the fourth ventricle, which presents as an intracranial translucency (IT) between the brain stem and choroid plexus, is easily visible. We measured the anteroposterior diameter of the fourth ventricle in 200 normal fetuses and in four fetuses with spina bifida. In the normal fetuses the fourth ventricle was always visible and the median anteroposterior diameter increased from 1.5 mm at a crown-rump length (CRL) of 45 mm to 2.5 mm at a CRL of 84 mm. In the four fetuses with spina bifida the ventricle was compressed by the caudally displaced hindbrain and no IT could be seen. The mid-sagittal view of the face as routinely used in screening for chromosomal defects can also be used for early detection of open spina bifida.
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              Posterior brain in fetuses with open spina bifida at 11 to 13 weeks.

              To measure the changes in the posterior fossa in first-trimester fetuses with open spina bifida (OSB). The brain stem diameter and brain stem to occipital bone (BSOB) diameter were measured in stored images of the mid-sagittal view of the fetal face at 11(+0) to 13(+6) weeks from 30 fetuses with OSB and 1000 normal controls. In the control group, the brain stem and BSOB diameter increased significantly with crown-rump length (CRL) and the brain stem to BSOB ratio decreased. In the spina bifida group, the brain stem diameter was above the 95th percentile of the control group in 29 (96.7%) cases, the BSOB diameter was below the 5th percentile in 26 (86.7%) and the brain stem to BSOB ratio was above the 95th percentile in all cases. At 11 to 13 weeks the majority of fetuses with OSB have measurable abnormalities in the posterior brain.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Ultrasound in Obstetrics & Gynecology
                Ultrasound Obstet Gynecol
                Wiley-Blackwell
                09607692
                December 2011
                December 28 2011
                : 38
                : 6
                : 609-612
                Article
                10.1002/uog.10128
                105d07a2-6bfe-41be-a9ff-96b45f7a6ca3
                © 2011

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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