In a prospective study during 1 year, 102 women with prolonged pregnancies (more than 294 completed gestational days) were followed with serial pulsed Doppler blood flow examinations every 2nd day, either to spontaneous onset of labor (n = 82) or to induction of labor due to subsequently occurring complications (n = 20). Mean aortic blood velocity did not change significantly with gestational age beyond 294 days either in fetuses with normal outcome or in fetuses that developed asphyxia at birth. The flow velocity waveforms in the descending aorta, the umbilical artery, the common carotid artery and the uterine artery did not change significantly compared to the values at term. Abnormal flow velocity waveforms in the fetal descending aorta, umbilical artery or uterine artery had no significant relationship to fetal asphyxia. Absence of diastolic flow velocities was not found in any of the vessels examined, indicating that the fetuses did not suffer from chronic hypoxia in utero and that aging of the placenta did not alter fetal and uteroplacental blood flow. Notching of the aortic flow velocity waveform was a common finding among prolonged pregnancies. The hemodynamic implications and consequences of this phenomenon are discussed.
The combination of angiography, ultrasound and fine-needle aspiration biopsy proved to be valuable in the preoperative evaluation of patients with a palpable mass. With ultrasound, the size, shape and origin of tumors exceeding 4 to 5 cm in diameter were correctly diagnosed, whereas angiography differentiated bettter between malignant and benign tumors.
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