With 4D sonography, it is possible to quantitatively assess normal neurobehavioral development. There is urgent need for further multicentric studies until a sufficient degree of normative data is available and the predictive validity of the specific relationship between fetal neurobehavior and child developmental outcome is better established.
4D ultrasound enables visualization of more details of the dynamics of small anatomical structures. Therefore, body and limb movements can be visualized a week earlier than with 2D.
Non-surgical treatment of interstitial pregnancy with methotrexate appears to be safe and effective. Local administration appears to be more successful and better tolerated by patients and may be used as the first-line therapy.
Three-dimensional sonography revolutionized ultrasound imaging with its capacity to depict an unlimited number of planes in which the object of interest can be displayed. The addition of numerous modalities of image rendering promotes three-dimensional sonography to the top of the spectrum of diagnostic imaging in obstetrics and gynecology. The aim of this article is to present our experience in 3-D sonography during the second and third trimester of pregnancy and to give a comparative review of literature. 247 patients in gestational age ranging from 12 to 40 weeks of gestation were examined over a three year period. The majority of patients entered the study because fetal anomaly was suspected at two-dimensional sonography. Some patients were sent on to three-dimensional sonography because it was not possible to depict clearly normal fetal anatomy by two dimensional sonography. Out of 170 fetal anomalies three-dimensional sonographic analysis failed in only three cases. In all three anomaly was accompanied with severe oligohydramnios. Main advantages of three-dimensional ultrasound in perinatal medicine and antenatal diagnosis include scanning in the coronal plane, improved assessment of complex anatomic structures, surface analysis of minor defects, volumetric measuring of organs, "plastic" transparent imaging of fetal skeleton, spatial presentation of blood flow arborization and, finally, storage of scanned volumes and images. It is our decided opinion that three-dimensional sonography has gained a valuable place in prenatal diagnosis, becoming a necessity for every modern perinatal unit.
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