1. Measuring the Area of the Interventricular Septum in the 4-Chamber View: A New Technique to Evaluate the Fetus at Risk for Septal Hypertrophy.
- Author
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DeVore GR, Klas B, Satou G, and Sklansky M
- Subjects
- Female, Pregnancy, Humans, Ultrasonography, Prenatal methods, Gestational Age, Hypertrophy, Heart Ventricles diagnostic imaging, Fetal Heart diagnostic imaging, Ventricular Septum diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Objectives: One of the problems for the clinician who desires to measure the interventricular septum (IVS) in a high-risk fetus is to know where to make the measurement. The purpose of this study was to use speckle-tracking analysis to measure the IVS area, 24-segment widths, and length at end-diastole (ED) and end-systole (ES) in normal fetuses., Methods: From the 4-chamber view, speckle-tracking analysis was performed at ED and ES on the IVS in 200 normal fetuses. The following were computed and regressed against gestational age (GA) and fetal biometric (FB) measurements: area, length, and the 24-segment transverse widths from the apex to the crux. The 24-segment width/length ratio was also measured. The speckle-tracking measurements of the ED area and length were compared using a point-to-point measurement tool available on all ultrasound machines., Results: The ED and ES areas, lengths, and 24-segment widths increased with GA and FB. The ED and ES areas were virtually identical. The 24-segment width/length ratio decreased from the apex to the crux of the septum. There was no significant difference in the measurement of the ED area and the length between speckle-tracking and the point-to-point measurements., Conclusions: Measurement of the area and length of the IVS are simple to obtain and provide a new diagnostic tool to evaluate the fetus at risk for IVS hypertrophy which may be observed in fetuses of mothers with pregestational and gestational diabetes., (© 2022 American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine.)
- Published
- 2022
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