Prenatal sonographic evaluation of short-limbed dwarfism is initiated when a significantly shortened femur is found or by referral of a patient with a family history of skeletal dysplasia. If a short femur is demonstrated, all the long bones are measured and evaluated for bowing, fractures, and mineralization. The bone dysplasia is categorized according to whether it is mesomelic, rhizomelic, or micromelic and whether bowing or fractures are present. The fetal spine, head, thorax, hands, and feet are carefully evaluated to differentiate the type of bone dysplasia and to determine whether it is lethal. Serial examinations may be necessary. This approach will provide sufficient information to counsel the family, manage the pregnancy, and direct the postnatal evaluation.
A recently developed biopsy gun was used in the ultrasound (US)-guided biopsy of native kidneys in seven children. The biopsy gun employs a needle (18 gauge) smaller than that usually used for renal biopsies. In all seven cases it provided a core biopsy specimen that contained enough glomeruli to make a definitive histologic diagnosis of renal parenchymal disease. Use of the biopsy gun eliminated the more complicated movements needed to obtain samples with the conventional manual biopsy techniques. No major complications occurred, and in only one case a minor complication, trace hematuria determined by means of dipstick analysis, was found. The time required to obtain the tissue samples was decreased with use of this technique. Because of the advantages of the biopsy gun, the authors now use it exclusively in percutaneous US-guided biopsy of native pediatric kidneys and recommended that this method be considered by other institutions performing similar biopsies.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.