“…54 PC also may be associated with chromosomal anomalies (including trisomies 13 and 18 syndromes and Turner syndrome), other central nervous system and craniofacial malformations (such as cleft lip or palate, encephalocele, anencephaly, meningocele, hydrocephalus, and exencephaly), thoracolumbar spina bifida, Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome, limb defects (clubbed foot, absence of tibia and radius, and hypodactyly), and abdominal organ defects (agenesis of the gallbladder and polysplenia). 20,45,52 Prenatal imaging findings are variable but usually show omphalocele, ectopic heart, and pericardial or pleural effusions; diaphragmatic defects may be difficult to characterize on MRI. 20 Although fetal MRI is useful for better assessing the malformations involving the abdominal wall and heart position, association with fetal echocardiography may be useful for characterizing intracardiac structural defects, thus enabling a more accurate diagnosis.…”