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. 1980 Dec;56(6):705-10.

Diagnostic ultrasound: early detection of fetal neural tube defects

  • PMID: 6160439

Diagnostic ultrasound: early detection of fetal neural tube defects

H P Robinson et al. Obstet Gynecol. 1980 Dec.

Abstract

In a series of 366 patients identified as at risk for a fetal neural tube defect (NTD) before the 24th week of pregnancy, 64 had an abnormal fetus. The abnormalities included anencephaly (39), open spinal defect (17), closed spinal defect (2), encephalocele (1), and a miscellany of other abnormalities (5). An ultrasound examinaton prior to diagnostic anmiocentesis positively identified all anencephalic fetuses, the fetus with the encephalocele, and 15 of the 19 fetuses with spina bifida. The spinal defects in 3 of the remaining 4 fetuses were demonstrated at a second examination. Since both amniotic fluid alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) assays and ultrasound examination have been shown to give false results in the diagnosis of NTDs, the importance of using 2 independent diagnostic techniques is stressed. In patients with elevated levels of maternal serum AFP, a careful ultrasound examination, in addition to identifying the majority of cases associated with an abnormal fetus, provided a good explanation for the elevation in over half of the remainder. In this series more than half the patients (40/69) who underwent amniocentesis because of raised maternal serum AFP levels were shown to have an abnormal fetus.

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