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ABSTRACT: To determine the normal cross-sectional areas of the umbilical vein, umbilical artery, and Wharton jelly in healthy pregnancies, and correlate the obtained values with fetal anthropometric parameters.
A cross-sectional study was performed with 312 women between the 24th and 39th weeks of a normal pregnancy. The cross-sectional areas of umbilical cord vessels were measured at the junction of the cord and fetal abdomen, and the values were subtracted from the total cord cross-sectional area to assess the cross-sectional area of the Wharton jelly. The anthropometric parameters analyzed were biparietal diameter, head circumference, femur length, and estimated fetal weight, and the Spearman correlation was used to assess the correlation between the cross-sectional areas of umbilical cord components and fetal anthropometric parameters. A polynomial regression analysis was performed to identify the curves that best adjusted to mean and standard deviation according to gestational age.
A statistically significant correlation was observed between the cross-sectional areas of cord components and fetal anthropometric parameters (P<0.001) as well as gestational age (P<0.001).
Reference measurements of the cross-sectional areas of umbilical cord components are important tools in the assessment of fetal growth.
International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics 03/2007; 96(3):156-61. · 2.05 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Investigate the prediction of birth acidemia in pregnancies with placental insufficiency using two newly created venous-arterial Doppler ratios: pulsatility index (PI) of the ductus venosus (DV) over PI of the middle cerebral artery (MCA) and PI of the DV over PI of the umbilical artery and establish cut-off values for this prediction.
This was a prospective cross-sectional study involving 47 patients with placental insufficiency managed in two Brazilian hospitals. All pregnancies were singleton, over 26 weeks of age and without structural or chromosome anomalies. A ROC curve was calculated for the venous-arterial ratios (independent variable) and acidemia (dependent variable).
The DV/AU PI ratio was not a good predictor of acidemia at birth. The DV/MCA PI ratio was related to fetal acidemia (area under the ROC curve 0.785, p = 0.004). The cut-off value was 0.582, sensibility 66.7%, specificity 77.1% and accuracy 74.5%.
The DV/MCA PI ratio is adequate for the diagnosis of acidemia at birth in pregnancies with placental insufficiency. The cut-off value was 0.582.
Fetal Diagnosis and Therapy 02/2006; 21(5):418-23. · 1.05 Impact Factor
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Ultrasound in Obstetrics and Gynecology 09/2005; 26(4):351 - 351. · 3.01 Impact Factor
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Ultrasound in Obstetrics and Gynecology 09/2005; 26(4):379 - 379. · 3.01 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: ObjectiveTo determine the normal cross-sectional areas of the umbilical vein, umbilical artery, and Wharton jelly in healthy pregnancies, and correlate the obtained values with fetal anthropometric parameters.MethodsA cross-sectional study was performed with 312 women between the 24th and 39th weeks of a normal pregnancy. The cross-sectional areas of umbilical cord vessels were measured at the junction of the cord and fetal abdomen, and the values were subtracted from the total cord cross-sectional area to assess the cross-sectional area of the Wharton jelly. The anthropometric parameters analyzed were biparietal diameter, head circumference, femur length, and estimated fetal weight, and the Spearman correlation was used to assess the correlation between the cross-sectional areas of umbilical cord components and fetal anthropometric parameters. A polynomial regression analysis was performed to identify the curves that best adjusted to mean and standard deviation according to gestational age.ResultsA statistically significant correlation was observed between the cross-sectional areas of cord components and fetal anthropometric parameters (P < 0.001) as well as gestational age (P < 0.001).ConclusionsReference measurements of the cross-sectional areas of umbilical cord components are important tools in the assessment of fetal growth.
International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics.