scholarly journals Increased Fetal Nuchal Translucency Thickness and Normal Karyotype: Prenatal and Postnatal Outcome

Down Syndrome ◽  
10.5772/53112 ◽  
2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ksenija Gersak ◽  
Darija M. ◽  
Maja Pohar-Perme
2021 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kyra E. Stuurman ◽  
Marjolein H. van der Mespel-Brouwer ◽  
Melanie A. J. Engels ◽  
Mariet W. Elting ◽  
Shama L. Bhola ◽  
...  

Background: Increased nuchal translucency (NT) is associated with aneuploidy. When the karyotype is normal, fetuses are still at risk for structural anomalies and genetic syndromes. Our study researched the diagnostic yield of prenatal microarray in a cohort of fetuses with isolated increased NT (defined as NT ≥ 3.5 mm) and questioned whether prenatal microarray is a useful tool in determining the adverse outcomes of the pregnancy.Materials and Methods: A prospective study was performed, in which 166 women, pregnant with a fetus with isolated increased NT (ranging from 3.5 to 14.3 mm with a mean of 5.4 mm) were offered karyotyping and subsequent prenatal microarray when karyotype was normal. Additionally, all ongoing pregnancies of fetuses with normal karyotype were followed up with regard to postnatal outcome. The follow-up time after birth was maximally 4 years.Results: Totally, 149 of 166 women opted for prenatal testing. Seventy-seven fetuses showed normal karyotype (52%). Totally, 73 of 77 fetuses with normal karyotype did not show additional anomalies on an early first trimester ultrasound. Totally, 40 of 73 fetuses received prenatal microarray of whom 3 fetuses had an abnormal microarray result: two pathogenic findings (2/40) and one incidental carrier finding. In 73 fetuses with an isolated increased NT, 21 pregnancies showed abnormal postnatal outcome (21/73, 28.8%), 29 had a normal outcome (29/73, 40%), and 23 were lost to follow-up (23/73, 31.5%). Seven out of 73 live-born children showed an adverse outcome (9.6%).Conclusions: Prenatal microarray in fetuses with isolated increased NT had a 5% (2/40) increased diagnostic yield compared to conventional karyotyping. Even with a normal microarray, fetuses with an isolated increased NT had a 28.8% risk of either pregnancy loss or an affected child.


Author(s):  
N.P. Veropotvelyan, A.A. Bondarenko

Objective. To evaluate the pre- and postnatal outcomes of euploid fetuses with aplasia/hypoplasia of the nasal bones (NB). Methods. We have made the catamnestic monitoring of children with a normal karyotype, who had been prenatally detected NB aplasia or hypoplasia (less than 5 perentile) at 11–24 weeks of gestation at ultrasound screening in the period between 2006–2015 years. Our study included a selection of 242 fetuses with NB aplasia or hypoplasia, in 128 (52.8 %) of them the NB was not visualized or appeared as an echogenic dot only. Results. Among all 63 fetuses with NB aplasia (absence or looks as an echogenic dot) in the 1st trimester in 24 (38 %) cases chromosomal abnormalities (CA) were found (including T21 — 15 (62.5 %) cases). Other 39 (61.9 %) fetuses had a normal karyotype. Among 65 fetuses with NB aplasia, examined in the 2nd trimester of gestation 12 (18.4 %) cases of CA were detected (one fetus with T21 had the only one ultrasound marker – isolated NB aplasia), 53 (81.5 %) fetuses had a normal karyotype. 62 mothers of the euploid fetuses with NB aplasia had been surveyed. We have received and analyzed 31 (50 %) responses. In 16 cases of euploid fetuses with NB, aplasia pregnancy outcome was adverse or relatively unfavorable, only 5 (31.2 %) fetuses of them had isolated NB aplasia. In other cases healthy full-term infants were born, who showed normal height and weight indexes, physical and psychomotor development observed in age from 0 to 10. Conclusion. In 51.6 % fetuses and children prenatally had aplasia of the nasal bone was marked by unfavorable pre- or postnatal outcome, according to the survey of their mothers.


2019 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 59-61
Author(s):  
Cristina Moisei ◽  
Anca Lesnica ◽  
Romina Marina Sima ◽  
Liana Pleș

Nuchal translucency (NT) is the normal fluid filled subcutaneous space measured at the back of the fetal neck measured in the late first trimester and early second trimester. Nuchal translucency screening can detect approximately 80% of fetuses with Down syndrome and other major aneuploidies with a rate of 5% of false positive results, but the merger of the NT screening with β-hCG and PAPP-A testing increases the detection rate to 90%. We present the case of a fetus with a NT of 49 mm detected at the first trimester ultrasound morphologic exam. The Kryptor test revealed a 1:35 risk for Trisomy 13 and 1:721 for Trisomy 18. We report the case of an investigated pregnancy with a NT of 49 mm detected at the first trimester ultrasound exam, with a risk of 1:35 for Trisomy 13 and 1:721 for Trisomy 18 calculated at the Kryptor test. A chorionic villus sampling was recommended and performed with a result of 46XY normal karyotype. The particularity of this case is represented by the increased nuchal translucency as well as an increased risk for trisomy 13 and 18 in a normal karyotype fetus that had a normal development in the second and third trimester with no pregnancy complications arising.


2015 ◽  
Vol 46 (6) ◽  
pp. 650-658 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Grande ◽  
F. A. R. Jansen ◽  
Y. J. Blumenfeld ◽  
A. Fisher ◽  
A. O. Odibo ◽  
...  

2007 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 11-18 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. M. Bilardo ◽  
M. A. Müller ◽  
E. Pajkrt ◽  
S. A. Clur ◽  
M. M. van Zalen ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuko Takahashi ◽  
Takeshi Nagamatsu ◽  
Tatsuya Fujii ◽  
Ayako Hashimoto ◽  
Seisuke Sayama ◽  
...  

Abstract Previous studies have reported that congenital heart diseases (CHDs) develop in patients with genetic and environmental predisposition. Compared to CHDs, the significance of hereditary factors in the pathogenesis of congenital venous system anomalies remains unclear. Additionally, reports describing the pathogenic relationship between venous system anomalies and increased nuchal translucency (NT) are few. We report sibling recurrence of congenital venous system anomalies. In the prenatal periods of both siblings, increased NT without aneuploidy was confirmed. In the first sibling, the absence of ductus venosus (ADV) and umbilical vein-coronary sinus anastomosis was detected using prenatal ultrasonography. In the second sibling, abnormality of the pulmonary vein was suspected prenatally, leading to a final diagnosis of infracardiac total anomalous pulmonary venous return (TAPVR). This is the first report of extracardiac venous anomaly-associated recurrence of increased NT among siblings. We conclude that a hereditary factor may be responsible for the development of ADV and TAPVR.


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