fetal ductus venosus flow assessment
Fetal ductus venosus flow assessment can be useful in a number of situations in fetal ultrasound:
- first-trimester screening for aneuploidic anomalies
- second and third-trimester scanning when there are concerns regarding
- intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR)
- fetal cardiac compromise
Of all the pre-cardiac veins, the ductus venosus allows the most accurate interpretation of fetal cardiac function as well as myocardial hemodynamics .
Radiographic assessment
Ultrasound
Technique
- the fetus should be as still as possible
- variability in the heights of the S and D waves may indicate fetal breathing, which is normal, but wait for the fetus to be more still before evaluating
- the probe is ideally focused so sampling is done where the umbilical vein joins the ductus venosus
- a right ventral mid-sagittal view of the fetal trunk should be obtained and color flow mapping used to demonstrate the umbilical vein, ductus venosus and fetal heart
- the probe is ideally angled to allow a mid sagittal plane or a transverse oblique plane through the fetal abdomen
- the image should be magnified enough for the fetal thorax and abdomen to occupy the whole screen
- do not contaminate the ductus venosus flow with the flow from the fetal inferior vena cava, for this the Doppler sample should be small (0.5-1 mm)
- the insonation angle should be 30° or less
- the sweep speed should be high (2-3 cm/s) so that the waveforms are spread allowing better assessment of the A wave
- set the wall filter low enough so that the A wave is not obscured
On Doppler ultrasound, the flow in the ductus venosus has a characteristic triphasic waveform where in a normal physiological situation flow should always be in the forward direction (i.e. towards the fetal heart).
This triphasic waveform comprises of:
- S wave: corresponds to fetal ventricular systolic contraction and is the highest peak
- D wave: corresponds to fetal early ventricular diastole and is the second highest peak
- A wave: corresponds to fetal atrial contraction and is the lowest point in the wave form albeit still being in the forward direction
- as above, reversal of the A wave (i.e. crossing the baseline) is always abnormal
See also
Siehe auch:
- aneuploidy
- Intrauterine Wachstumsretardierung
- abnormal ductus venosus waveforms
- utero-placental flow assessment