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      Posterior brain in fetuses with open spina bifida at 11 to 13 weeks.

      Prenatal Diagnosis
      Brain, embryology, Brain Stem, ultrasonography, Crown-Rump Length, Echoencephalography, Female, Gestational Age, Humans, Nuchal Translucency Measurement, Observer Variation, Occipital Bone, Pregnancy, Spina Bifida Cystica, Ultrasonography, Prenatal

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          Abstract

          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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