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Original Article

Intra-Uterine Growth and Fatal Fetal Abnormality

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Pages 43-47 | Received 15 Apr 1981, Published online: 09 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

To study intra-uterine growth in pregnancies complicated by fatal abnormality of the fetus, 73 pregnancies involving fetal or neonatal death caused by malformation, chromosomal aberration or Mendelian disease were evaluated. Small-for-gestational age newborns were found in 45% of the patients, and this finding was typical of 18-trisomies, amnion adhesion syndrome fetuses and multimalformed fetuses. Pregnancies affected by a Mendelian disease or a single fetal malformation mostly presented normal intra-uterine growth. In 25% of the patients, the symphyseal-fun-dal growth was retarded; this retardation started on average in the 25th gestational week. Polyhydramnios was present in 30% of the patients and was expressed in growth acceleration of the symphyseal-fundal measurement from the 28th gestational week. In 45% of the small-for-gestational-age fetuses the biparietal growth showed low profile type retardation. The brain-sparing phenomenon in growth was found in 21%. To assess the prospects of the conceivable modes of treatment, the need for an exact diagnostic evaluation of all pregnancies complicated by intra-uterine growth retardation and a consideration of the need for diagnostic amniocentesis in cases of early growth retardation is emphasized. This also applies to the time after legal abortion.

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