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Three‐ and 4‐Dimensional Ultrasound in Obstetric Practice
Author(s) -
Gonçalves Luís F.,
Lee Wesley,
Espinoza Jimmy,
Romero Roberto
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
journal of ultrasound in medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.574
H-Index - 91
eISSN - 1550-9613
pISSN - 0278-4297
DOI - 10.7863/jum.2005.24.12.1599
Subject(s) - medicine , obstetric ultrasound , ultrasound , radiology , neural tube defect , 3d ultrasound , medical physics , obstetrics , fetus , pregnancy , genetics , biology
Objective The purpose of this article was to review the published literature on 3‐dimensional ultrasound (3DUS) and 4‐dimensional ultrasound (4DUS) in obstetrics and determine whether 3DUS adds diagnostic information to what is currently provided by 2‐dimensional ultrasound (2DUS) and, if so, in what areas. Methods A PubMed search was conducted for articles reporting on the use of 3DUS or 4DUS in obstetrics. Seven‐hundred six articles were identified, and among those, 525 were actually related to the subject of this review. Articles describing technical developments, clinical studies, reviews, editorials, and studies on fetal behavior or maternal‐fetal bonding were reviewed. Results Three‐dimensional ultrasound provides additional diagnostic information for the diagnosis of facial anomalies, especially facial clefts. There is also evidence that 3DUS provides additional diagnostic information in neural tube defects and skeletal malformations. Large studies comparing 2DUS and 3DUS for the diagnosis of congenital anomalies have not provided conclusive results. Preliminary evidence suggests that sonographic tomography may decrease the examination time of the obstetric ultrasound examination, with minimal impact on the visualization rates of anatomic structures. Conclusions Three‐dimensional ultrasound provides additional diagnostic information for the diagnosis of facial anomalies, evaluation of neural tube defects, and skeletal malformations. Additional research is needed to determine the clinical role of 3DUS and 4DUS for the diagnosis of congenital heart disease and central nervous system anomalies. Future studies should determine whether the information contained in the volume data set, by itself, is sufficient to evaluate fetal biometric measurements and diagnose congenital anomalies.

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