Abstract

To establish the increase in fetal transverse cerebellar diameter (TCD) relative to gestational age during normal and restricted fetal growth; to determine the significance of TCD and TCD/AC relationship in predicting fetal outcome as expressed by perinatal mortality. A retrospective cross-sectional study. Three hundred and sixty normally developing fetuses between 17 and 34 weeks of gestation and 73 growth-restricted fetuses between 24 and 34 weeks of gestation. Ultrasonographic measurements included head circumference (mm), abdominal circumference (mm) and transverse cerebellar diameter (mm). A gestational age-related normal reference chart was produced for TCD. Statistically significant relationships between transverse cerebellar diameter and gestational age, abdominal circumference and head circumference were found. The normal fetal TCD exhibited a more than twofold increase in size during the second half of pregnancy. Twenty-six per cent of the small-for-gestational age (SGA) fetuses displayed a reduced TCD and 82% of the SGA fetuses demonstrated raised TCD/AC values. No statistically significant difference in perinatal mortality or birth weight was found between the subsets of growth-restricted fetuses with reduced or normal TCD; or between the subsets with normal or raised TCD/AC values. In the normally developing fetus the TCD increases with advancing gestational age. Increased TCD/AC values are suspicious of fetal growth restriction. The perinatal mortality in growth-restricted fetuses with a small cerebellum is increased twofold over that of other fetuses.

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