Normal mandibular growth and diagnosis of micrognathia at prenatal MRI
- PMID: 25224124
- DOI: 10.1002/pd.4496
Normal mandibular growth and diagnosis of micrognathia at prenatal MRI
Abstract
Objective: The aim of this article is to present reference data for fetal mandibular growth on magnetic resonance imaging, enabling the diagnosis of micrognathia.
Methods: Retrospectively, on 355 magnetic resonance scans of apparently facially normal fetuses [gestational age (GA), 20-36 weeks], mandibular anterior-posterior diameter (APD = mandibular size), inferior facial angle (IFA = mandibular position), and jaw index (APD normalized to biparietal diameter) were correlated with GA by Pearson correlation. APD-age relationship was modeled. A receding chin was subjectively determined. Ten fetuses with mandibular anomalies were compared with normal fetuses.
Results: For GA, APD showed high correlation (r = 0.850; P < 0.001), IFA (r = 0.086; P = 0.119) no correlation, and jaw index (r = -0.139; P = 0.018) weak correlation. APD-age relationship was expressed by the following: APD = 0.281 + 0.989 * GA (r(2) = 0.723). A receding chin was identified in 7/10 abnormal fetuses. APD, IFA, and jaw index of abnormal and normal fetuses were significantly different (P < 0.001). In 10/10 abnormal fetuses, IFA was <50.0°; in 7/10, jaw index was less than the fifth percentile (micrognathia); in 3/10, jaw index was at low normal range (retrognathia).
Conclusions: Subjective identification of micrognathia may be limited. Reference data provide quantitative evaluation of mandibular size and position. An IFA <50° reflects micrognathia or retrognathia; a jaw index less than the fifth percentile suggests micrognathia.
© 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Comment in
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Comparison of best landmarks for calculating fetal jaw measurements by ultrasound and MRI in micrognathia.Pediatr Radiol. 2024 Oct;54(11):1862-1863. doi: 10.1007/s00247-024-06038-9. Epub 2024 Aug 31. Pediatr Radiol. 2024. PMID: 39214867 No abstract available.
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