Second‐trimester ultrasonographic assessment of the umbilical coiling index
Male
Observer Variation
Gestational Age
Ultrasonography, Prenatal
3. Good health
Umbilical Cord
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Pregnancy
Pregnancy Trimester, Second
Humans
Female
DOI:
10.1046/j.1469-0705.2002.00846.x
Publication Date:
2003-03-12T23:25:10Z
AUTHORS (3)
ABSTRACT
AbstractObjectiveTo determine the relationship between gestational age and the ultrasonic measurement of umbilical coiling index (UCI), and to assess the ability of second‐trimester ultrasonic measurements of UCI to predict the true UCI, determined at birth.Subjects/methodsFive hundred and thirty‐one consecutive women with uncomplicated pregnancies, booking for delivery with a singleton pregnancy, were recruited during a routine second‐trimester fetal morphology scan. Multiple ultrasonographic measurements of the intercoil distance were performed between two to three coils of the umbilical cord, along its entire visible length. Three hundred and seventy‐four patients (70%) were followed until delivery when the true UCI was measured.ResultsAn adequate portion of umbilical cord for assessment of coiling was visualized in 99% of cases. Adequate ultrasonographic visibility rates for the fetal, middle and placental regions of the cord were different. All three regions of the umbilical cord could only be visualized adequately in 10% of cases, and two regions were visible in 75%.The UCI progressively decreased along the cord from the fetal insertion to the placental insertion. The mean decrease in UCI with increasing gestational age was similar in all parts of the cord before the 23rd week (160 days) of pregnancy, and plateaued off after this point, except in measurements performed near the fetal insertion. The sensitivity of second‐trimester ultrasound examination for predicting hypercoiling at birth was 17.3% and for predicting hypocoiling was 9.1%.DiscussionWhilst UCI can be measured easily and reliably in the second trimester these estimates do not accurately reflect the UCI at term. Our original assumption that umbilical coiling does not alter after the initial formation of coils in the first trimester is incorrect; mixed patterns occurred in about 25% of cases. These patterns develop during the second and third trimesters, presumably due to snarls in the cord, and influence the final coiling number and therefore the relationship between the two measurements of UCI. Copyright © 2002 International Society of Ultrasound in Obstetrics and Gynecology
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