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Original Articles

Fetal transient tricuspid valve regurgitation: sonographic features and clinical evolution

, , , ORCID Icon &
Pages 2435-2439 | Received 27 Jun 2019, Accepted 10 Sep 2019, Published online: 25 Sep 2019
 

Abstract

Purpose

To analyze the prevalence, the sonographic features, the clinical evolution and significance of fetal tricuspid valve regurgitation (TR).

Study design

This is a prospective study. Serial ultrasound examinations were performed at 20–23, at 26–29 and at 30–34 gestational weeks in 675 consecutive singleton pregnancies with fetal normal growth and normal cardiac anatomy. The fetal tricuspid valve regurgitation was classified according to its duration, to the peak of jet maximum velocity and to its maximum spatial extension. A clinical examination and echocardiography were performed in neonates after birth.

Results

During the first examination (20–23 weeks), 32 cases of tricuspid valve regurgitation were identified. The prevalence of tricuspid regurgitation was 4.74%. The large majority of TR cases were not-holosystolic (87.5%), with a maximum velocity below 2 m/sec (80–130 cm/sec in 84% cases and 180–200 cm/sec in 16% cases) and with a little spatial extension (type I or II in 87.5% cases). Following this hemodynamic phenomenon during the following weeks, we found that it disappeared around 29 weeks in all cases.

Conclusions

Tricuspid regurgitation observed during the second trimester can be considered a transient and functional hemodynamic phenomenon, without apparent pathological significance.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors. The authors are responsible for the content and writing of the paper.

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