Abstract
The objective of our study was to establish a nomogram of fetal spine length in the second trimester of pregnancy by using two and three-dimensional ultrasound. Fetal spine length was measured prospectively by means of transabdominal ultrasonography in 114 normal singleton pregnancies between 14 and 24 weeks of gestation. Regression analyses were performed on spine length, gestational age, biparietal diameter and femur length. Supplementary three-dimensional ultrasound to assess fetal spine length was performed in 75 cases. Fetal spine length, as a function of gestational age, was expressed by the following regression equation: spine length (mm) = -47.2 + 7.16 x gestational age (weeks), with a Pearson correlation coefficient of R(2)=0.956. The results of the measurements revealed no difference between two and three-dimensional ultrasound. Our study defines the normal limits of fetal spinal length in the second trimester of pregnancy and demonstrates a high correlation between spinal length, gestational age, biparietal diameter and femur length. However, there are still too few prenatal research data to say whether and to what extent an assessment of fetal spine length at this stage of pregnancy can be used for prenatal diagnosis of congenital syndromes, which, among other manifestations, are marked by fetal spine lengthening or shortening.
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