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1st Trimester Ultrasound
Scanning
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First trimester scanning is useful to identify
abnormalities in the early development of a pregnancy, including
miscarriage and ectopic pregnancy, and provides the most accurate dating
of a pregnancy.
Technique
First trimester scanning can be performed using either an abdominal
approach or a vaginal approach. Abdominal scanning is performed with a
full maternal bladder, provides a wider field of view, and provides the
greatest depth of view. Vaginal scanning is best performed with the
bladder empty, gives a much greater resolution with greater crispness of
fine detail. In circumstances where both approaches are readily available,
the greater detail provided by transvaginal scans usually outweighs other
considerations, and is preferred.
The patient is scanned in the normal examination position
(dorsal lithotomy) with her feet secure in stirrups and her perineum even
with the end of the examination table. Place a small amount of ultrasonic
coupling gel on the tip of the transvaginal transducer. Then cover the
transducer with a condom. After lubricating the vaginal opening, gently
insert the transducer into the vagina.
Visualize the longitudinal plane of the uterus (sagital
section) and evaluate its' size. It can be measured from the cervix to the
fundus, AP diameter, and width. Normal uterine volume is less than 100 cc
(nulliparous patients) and less than 125 cc (multiparous patients).
Identify (if present), the gestational sac, yolk sac, fetus (or fetuses),
presence or absence of fetal movement and fetal heart
beat.
After the uterus is evaluated by sweeping up and down and
side to side, the ovaries are identified and evaluated. This is most
easily accomplished by first identifying the internal iliac vessels. The
ovaries are usually located just anterior to the iliac vessels.
Document important views and measurements on film or
electronically. Then document your findings in some written
format.
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1st Trimester Ultrasound
Scan
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Gestational
Sac
The gestational sac is the earliest
sonographic finding in pregnancy. The gestational sac appears as an
echogenic (bright echoes) ring surrounding a sonolucent (clear) center.
The gestational sac does not correspond to specific anatomic structures,
but is an ultrasonic finding characteristic of early pregnancy. Ectopic
pregnancies can also have a gestational sac identified with ultrasound,
even though the pregnancy is not within the endometrial
cavity.
The gestational sac first appears at about 4 weeks
gestational age, and grows at a rate of about 1 mm a day through the 9th
week of pregnancy.
Your ability to identify an early gestational sac will
depend on many factors, including the capabilities of the ultrasound
equipment, your approach (vaginal or abdominal), your experience, the
orientation of the uterus (generally it is easier to see if the uterus is
anteflexed or retroflexed), and the presence of such complicating factors
as fibroid tumors of the uterus. While a gestational sac is sometimes seen
as early as during the 4th week of gestation, it may not be seen until the
end of the 5th week, when the serum HCG levels have risen to 1000-1500
mIU.
Gestational sac size may be determined by measuring the
largest diameter, or the mean of three diameters. These differences rarely
effect gestational age dating by more than a day or two.
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1st
Trimester Ultrasound Scan
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Yolk Sac
As
the pregnancy advances, the next structure to become visible to ultrasound
is the yolk sac. This is a round, sonolucent structure with a bright
rim.
The yolk sac first appears during the fifth week of
pregnancy and grows to be no larger than 6 mm. Yolk sacs larger than 6 mm
are usually indicative of an abnormal pregnancy. Failure to identify (with
transvaginal ultrasound) a yolk sac when the gestational sac has grown to
12 mm is also usually indicative of a failed pregnancy.
Yolk sacs that are moving within the gestational sac
("floating"), contain echogenic material (rather than sonolucent), or are
gross misshapen are ominous findings for the pregnancy.
Fetal Heart
Beat
Using endovaginal scanning, fetal cardiac
activity is often seen even before a fetal cell mass can be identified.
The fetal cardiac muscle begins its' rhythmic contractions, and that
rhythmic motion can be seen along the edge of the yolk sac. Initially, the
fetal cardiac motion has a slower rate (60-90 BPM), but cardiac rate
increases as the fetus develops further. Thus, for these early
pregnancies, the actual cardiac rate is less important that its presence
or absence.
Sometimes, with normal pregnancies, the fetal heartbeat is
not visible until a fetal pole of up to 4 mm in length is seen. Failure to
identify fetal cardiac activity in a fetus whose overall length is greater
than 4 mm is an ominous sign.
It can sometimes be difficult identifying a fetal
heartbeat from the background movement and maternal pulsations. You may
find it useful in these cases to scan with one hand while taking the
maternal pulse with the other. This makes it easier to identify
sonographic movements that are dyssynchronous with the maternal
pulse.
Fetal Pole
A mass of fetal cells, separate from the yolk sac, first becomes
apparent on transvaginal ultrasound just after the 6th week of gestation.
This mass of cells is known as the fetal pole. It is the fetus in its
somite stage. Usually you can identify rhythmic fetal cardiac movement
within the fetal pole, although it may need to grow several mm before this
is apparent.
The fetal pole grows at a rate of about 1 mm a day,
starting at the 6th week of gestational age. Thus, a simple way to "date"
an early pregnancy is to add the length of the fetus (in mm) to 6 weeks.
Using this method, a fetal pole measuring 5 mm would have a gestational
age of 6 weeks and 5 days.
Crown Rump
Length
This term is borrowed from the early
20th century embryologists who found that preserved specimens of early
miscarriages assumed a "sitting in the chair" posture in both formalin and
alcohol. This posture made the measurement of head-to-toe length
impossible. Instead, they subsituted the head-to-butt length (crown rump
length) as a reproducible method of measuring the fetus.
Early ultrasonographers used this term (CRL) because early
fetuses also adopted the sitting in the chair posture in early pregnancy.
Today, the crown rump length is a universally recognized term, very useful
for measuring early pregnancies. The CRL is highly reproducible and is the
single most accurate measure of gestational age. After 12 weeks, the
accuracy of CRL in predicting gestational age diminishes and is replaced
by measurement of the fetal biparietal diameter.
In at least some respects, the term "crown rump length" is
misleading:
- For much of the first trimester, there is no fetal
crown and no fetal rump to measure.
- Until 53 days from the LMP, the most caudad portion of
the fetal cell mass is the caudal neurospone, followed by the tail. Only
after 53 days is the fetal rump the most caudal portion of the fetus.
- Until 60 days from the LMP, the most cephalad portion
of the fetal cell mass is initially the rostral neurospore, and later
the cervical flexure. After 60 days, the fetal head becomes the most
cephalad portion of the fetal cell mass.
- What is really measured during this early development
of the fetus is the longest fetal diameter.
From 6 weeks to 9 1/2 weeks gestational age, the fetal CRL
grows at a rate of about 1 mm per day.
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Gestational Age
(Weeks)
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Sac Size
(mm)
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CRL
(mm)
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4
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3
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5
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6
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6
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14
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7
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27
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8
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8
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29
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15
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9
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33
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21
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10
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31
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11
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41
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12
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51
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13
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71
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Determination
of Gestational Age
Measurement of the
gestational sac diameter or the length of the fetal pole (CRL) can be used
to determine gestational age. Charts have been developed for this purpose,
but some simple rules of thumb can also be effectively used.
- Gestational Sac: Gestational age = 4 weeks plus (mean
sac diameter in mm x days). This relies on the growth of the normal
gestational sac of 1 mm per day after the 4th week of gestation. For
example, a gestational sac measuring 11 mm would be approximately 5
weeks and 4 days gestational age. (4 weeks plus 11 days = 5 weeks and 4
days).
- Crown Rump Length: Gestational age = 6 weeks plus (CRL
x days). This relies on the growth of the normal fetus of 1 mm per day
after the 6th week of gestation. For example, a CRL of 16 mm would
correspond to a gestational age of 8 weeks and two days (6 weeks plus 16
days = 8 weeks and 2 days).
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Twins
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Twins
Twins and
other multiple gestations can usually be identified fairly early in
pregnancy. They may be seen with two separate gestational sacs
(diamniotic, dichorionic twins). They may be seen as two fetal poles
occupying the same gestational sac (monochorionic twins). It is useful to
identify twins early as the prognosis varies, depending on the
chorionicity and amnionicity of the twins.
A "vanishing twin" occurs in about 20% of twin
pregnancies. In these cases, one of the twins fails to grow and thrive.
Instead, its development arrests and it is reabsorbed, with no evidence at
delivery of the twin pregnancy. It will prove useful to advise patients of
this phenomenon who are found to have twins early in pregnancy.
Missed
Abortion
A missed abortion is an abnormal
pregnancy that is destined to miscarry. About one in five early
pregnancies will not survive. These will grow for a while, with HCG in the
urine and serum, but eventually will stop growing normally, and then will
stop growing at all. Most of these (two-thirds) will have abnormal
chromosomes. Evidence of a missed abortion using high-resolution
transvaginal scanning includes:
- Absence of any growth of the gestational sac or fetal
pole over a 5-day period of observation.
- Absence of a visible fetal heartbeat when the CRL is
greater than 5 mm.
- Gestational sac larger than 12 mm mean diameter without
visual evidence of a yolk sac.
- Yolk sac larger than 6 mm diameter
- Yolk sac that is abnormally shaped or echogenic (sono
dense rather than the normal sono lucent).
- Loss of fetal cardiac activity that was previously
seen.
Threatened
Abortion
A threatened abortion is any 1st
trimester pregnancy that demonstrates uterine bleeding and/or cramping.
Such patients are frequently evaluated with ultrasound. Bleeding in early
pregnancy is a common event and is seen in 25 to 40% of pregnancies. About
half of these will go on to miscarry while the other half will be
normal.
The benefits to ultrasound evaluation include:
- Detection of abnormal pregnancies that are destined to
miscarry.
- Enabling scheduled intervention, if desired by the
patient.
- Enabling collection of pregnancy tissue for chromosomal
analysis, if desired by the patient.
- Reassurance to the patients with normal ultrasound
scans.
Unfortunately, diagnosis of an abnormal pregnancy does not
allow for intervention to correct the abnormality.
In the presence of uterine bleeding, visualization of a
gestational sac, a yolk sac, a fetal pole and fetal heart beat changes the
risk of a threatened abortion leading to miscarriage from 50/50 to about
5%.
Observation of subchorionic bleeding (blood outside the
sac) is noted in about 20% of patients with threatened abortion. This is a
worrisome sign, and reduces the pregnancy continuation rate to about
2/3.
Incomplete
Abortion
Ultrasound is sometimes used after
passage of pregnancy tissue to determine whether any pregnancy tissue
remains inside the uterus. Findings will vary in these cases. Sometimes,
it is obvious that there is nothing left inside the uterus, as evidenced
by a thin, complete endometrial stripe. In other cases, there will be
obvious pregnancy tissue. In the remaining cases, some material will still
be present inside the uterus, but it won't be clear (on ultrasound)
whether this is blood, blood clot, or retained products of
conception.
Ectopic
Pregnancy
Early intrauterine pregnancies are
relatively easy to see with high resolution transvaginal ultrasound
scanning. Pregnancies outside the uterus (ectopic pregnancies) are more
difficult. The appearance of the ectopic pregnancy itself is the same as
for intrauterine pregnancies. Depending of the gestational age and
normalcy of development, you may see a gestational sac, a yolk sac, a
fetal pole, and a fetal heartbeat. The difficulty lies in finding the
pregnancy without the normal uterine landmarks.
Using transvaginal scanning, about half of the ectopic
pregnancies can be directly visualized, but in the other half of cases,
only indirect evidence of an ectopic pregnancy will be found. Such
indirect evidence includes:
- Absence of an identifiable intrauterine pregnancy with
maternal serum HCG levels of more than 1500 (this number varies and may
be lower in some labs).
- Presence of an intrauterine gestational "pseudosac."
These thin-walled structures represent some fluid (sometimes blood)
within a decidualized endometrium that bears a superficial resemblence
to a gestational sac. However, it lacks the bright echogenic ring of a
true gestational sac and will never contain a yolk sac.
- Large amounts of free fluid (blood) inside the
abdominal cavity. Small amounts of free fluid are non-diagnostic, as
this is commonly seen in cases of spontaneous abortion, ruptured ovarian
cysts, and ovulation.
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Ovarian Follicle
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Corpus Luteum
Cyst
Following release of the egg, the ovarian
follicle changes into a corpus luteum, responsible for production of
hormones that will help support the developing pregnancy. The observation
of these small (usually less than 5 cm) ovarian cysts during early
pregnancy is essentially a normal finding. Should the cyst be large (5 cm
or more), or have suspicious characteristics, they may be followed as most
corpus luteum cysts will resolve spontaneously sometime during the first
trimester.
Not all ovarian cysts identified during the first
trimester are corpus luteum cysts. Innocent paratubal cysts can be seen,
requiring no treatment, as well as ovarian dermoid tumors which can be
more threatening.
Nuchal
Translucency Thickness
Late in the first
trimester, an echolucent area can be identified at the back of the neck of
normal fetuses. Normally thin, it has been observed that an unusually
thick translucency is sometimes associated with such abnormalities as
trisomy 21 and other fetal malformations.
Between the 11th and end of the 13th week of gestation,
the measurement of nuchal translucency is obtained with the fetus in
saggital section and a neutral position of the fetal head (neither
hyperflexed nor extended, either of which can influence the nuchal
translucency thickness). The fetal image is enlarged to fill 75% of the
screen, and the maximum thickness is measured, from leading edge to
leading edge. It is important to distinguish the nuchal lucency from the
underlying amnionic membrane.
Normal thickness depends on the overall size of the fetus
(CRL), but it should not exceed 3 mm at any gestational age. Among those
fetuses whose nuchal translucency exceeds the normal values, there is a
relatively high risk of significant abnormality. Between 65 and 85% of
trisomic fetuses will have a large nuchal thickness. Further, other,
non-trisomic abnormalities may also demonstrate an enlarged nuchal
transparency. This leaves the measurement of nuchal transparency as a
potentially useful 1st trimester screening tool, particularly in
combination with biochemical screening. Abnormal findings allow for early
careful evaluation of chromosomes and possible structural defects on a
targeted basis.
Original text: http://www.brooksidepress.org/Products/Military_OBGYN/Ultrasound/1st_trimester_ultrasound_scannin.htm