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Shining light in dark corners: Diagnosis and management of late‐onset fetal growth restriction
Author(s) -
MacDonald Teresa M.,
McCarthy Elizabeth A.,
Walker Susan P.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
australian and new zealand journal of obstetrics and gynaecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.734
H-Index - 65
eISSN - 1479-828X
pISSN - 0004-8666
DOI - 10.1111/ajo.12264
Subject(s) - medicine , fetal growth , fetus , intervention (counseling) , pregnancy , pediatrics , obstetrics , gestational age , intensive care medicine , genetics , psychiatry , biology
Fetal growth restriction ( FGR ) is the single biggest risk factor for stillbirth. In the absence of any effective treatment for fetal growth restriction, the mainstay of management is close surveillance and timely delivery. While such statements are almost self‐evident, the daily clinical challenge of late‐onset fetal growth restriction remains; the competing priorities of minimising stillbirth risk, while avoiding excessive obstetric intervention and the neonatal sequelae of iatrogenic preterm birth. This dilemma is made harder because the tools for late‐onset FGR diagnosis and surveillance compare poorly to those used in early‐onset FGR ; screening tests in early pregnancy have limited predictive value; most cases escape clinical detection, a phenomenon set to worsen given the obesity epidemic; there is a failure of consensus on the definition of small for gestational age, and ancillary tools, such as umbilical artery Doppler – of value in identification of preterm FGR – are less useful in the late‐preterm period and at term. Most importantly, the problem is common; 96% of all births occur after 32 weeks. This means a poor noise/signal ratio of any test or management algorithm will inevitably have large clinical consequences. Into such a dark corner, we cast some light; a summary on diagnostic criteria, new developments to improve the diagnosis of late‐onset FGR and a suggested approach to management.

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