Fetal echocardiography was performed using a high-frequency vaginal ultrasound probe in 114 singleton pregnancies between 11 and 16 weeks of gestation. The four-chamber view with both atria, atrioventricular valves and ventricles as well as the origin and double-crossing of aorta and pulmonary trunk could always be demonstrated from the 13th week onwards. In 12 of 13 cases, cardiac malformations were diagnosed in the first trimester. Only in one case was transabdominal echocardiography necessary at 20 weeks to make the diagnosis. In several cases, however, additional malformations were overlooked, in particular anomalies of the great arteries, such as coarctation of the aorta. Therefore, the accuracy of second-trimester transabdominal echocardiography is markedly higher. Because of the lower diagnostic accuracy, the high costs of equipment and the high training demanded of the examiner, first-trimester transvaginal echocardiography should be restricted to the high-risk fetus, i.e.: (1) Cases with other fetal anomalies very often associated with cardiac defects, such as nuchal edema and hygroma, non-immune hydrops, omphalocele, situs, inversus, or persisting arrythmia; (2) High-risk families with one or more first-degree relatives with cardiac defects are either inherited by Mendelian rules alone, or as part of a rare syndrome; and (3) In pregestational diabetes of the mother.Thus, many severe cardiac defects can be detected or excluded in the first trimester, reducing maternal anxiety. In these high-risk cases, second-trimester echocardiography using the transabdominal route should always be performed because of its distinctly higher diagnostic accuracy.
Erythropoietin production switches from fetal liver to adult kidney during development. GATA transcription factors 2 and 3 could be involved in modulating this switch, because they were shown to negatively regulate erythropoietin gene transcription through a promoter proximal GATA site. Herein, we analyzed the role of several GATA factors in the regulation of the erythropoietin gene in human liver and in hepatoma cells. Although GATA-3 expression in hepatocytes increases during human development, erythropoietin mRNA accumulation is unaltered in mutant mice lacking GATA-3. We found that GATA-2, -3, -4, and -6 are all expressed in human hepatocytes and that GATA-4 exhibits the most prominent Epo promoter binding activity in vitro and in vivo. Inhibition of GATA-4 expression by RNA interference leads to a dramatic reduction in Epo gene transcription in Hep3B cells. Moreover, GATA-4 expression is high and limited to hepatocytes in the fetal liver, whereas GATA-4 expression in the adult liver is low and restricted to epithelial cells surrounding the biliary ducts. Thus, GATA-4 is critical for transcription of the Epo gene in hepatocytes and may contribute to the switch in the site of Epo gene expression from the fetal liver to the adult kidney.
Objective: The current operative approach for fetal repair of spina bifida aperta requires maternal laparotomy and hysterotomy. Following technical feasibility studies in sheep, we performed percutaneous fetoscopic patch coverage of this lesion in 3 human fetuses between 23 + 4 and 25 + 3 weeks of gestation. Methods and Results: Whereas the patch detached in the first case 3 weeks after the procedure, it covered the exposed neural tissue in the 2 other fetuses beyond their delivery. Two of the three children survived, but 1 unexpectedly died from a ventilation problem in its 3rd week of life. In 1 of the 2 survivors, ventriculoperitoneal shunt insertion was delayed. Conclusions: Percutaneous fetoscopic patch coverage of spina bifida aperta is feasible in human fetuses and offers a substantial reduction of maternal trauma compared to open fetal repair. Further clinical experience is now required before the efficacy of the new approach to protect the exposed neural tissue from mechanical and chemical damage and to improve hindbrain herniation can be evaluated.
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