Foetal growth Flashcards

1
Q

how is fetal growth measured?

A

abdominal palpation of fundal height
symphysio-fundal height
USS: head circumference, abdominal circumference, femur length

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2
Q

What is low birth weight

A

<2500g

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3
Q

causes of small for gestational age

A

constitutionally small

fetal growth restriction (IUGR)

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4
Q

fetal growth restriction

A

placenta-mediated growth restriction

non-placenta mediated growth restriction

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5
Q

placenta-mediated growth restriction causes

A
idiopathic
pre-eclampsia
maternal smoking
maternal alcohol
anaemia
malnutrition
infection
maternal health conditions
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6
Q

non-placenta mediated growth restriction causes

A

genetic abnormalities
structural abnormalities
fetal infection
errors of metabolism

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7
Q

signs of fetal growth restriction

A

reduced amniotic fluid volume
abnormal Doppler studies
reduced fetal movements
abnormal CTGs

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8
Q

short-term complications of FGR

A

fetal death or stillbirth
birth asphyxia
neonatal hypothermia
neonatal hypoglycaemia

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9
Q

why does FGR cause increase morbidity and mortality?

A

Intrauterine hypoxia

Acidaemia

Prematurity, iatrogenic

Neonatal complications

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10
Q

increased risk of which conditions in growth restricted babies?

A

Cardiovascular disease, particularly hypertension

Type 2 diabetes

Obesity

Mood and behavioural problems

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11
Q

risk factors for small gestational age

A

Previous SGA baby

Recurrent fetal loss

Previous unexplained small baby

Raised AFP

Infection

Placental pathology (praevia, cirumvallata)

Obesity

Smoking, alcohol, substance abuse

Domestic violence

Prescription and OTC drugs

High altitude

Diabetes

Existing hypertension

Pre-eclampsia

Older mother (over 35 years)

Multiple pregnancy 
Low pregnancy‑associated plasma protein‑A (PAPPA) 
Haemoglobinopathies 
Collagen vascular disease 
Renal disease  
Antepartum haemorrhage 
Antiphospholipid syndrome
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12
Q

high risk factors for small gestational age

A

Previous FGR is biggest risk factor

Recurrent fetal loss

Previous unexplained stillbirth

1st trimester bleeding

Smoking

Unexplained raised AFP

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13
Q

reasons for small fetus

A

Normal small:
Constitutionally small, healthy baby

Abnormal small:
Chromosomal abnormalities
Syndromes
Congenital malformations

Infected small:
Infection during pregnancy
Commonly CMV

Starved small: 
Placental FGR most common cause 
Poor placentation 
Smoking 
Maternal disease affecting placenta 
Multiple pregnancy  

Wrong small:
Incorrect dates or measurements

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14
Q

How to differentiate small for dates from fetal growth restriction

A
centile position
symmetry
liquor volume
UMA doppler
growth velocity
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15
Q

Symphysio-fundal height <10th centile:

next step

A

serial growth scans with umbilical artery doppler

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16
Q

when are women booked for serial growth scans with umbilical arteyr doppler?

A

SFH <10th centile
three or more minor risk factors
one or more major risk factos
issues with measuring SFH (large fibroids, BMI>35)

17
Q

What is measured on serial USS in women at risk or with SGA

A

Estimated fetal weight (EFW) and abdominal circumference (AC) to determine the growth velocity

Umbilical arterial pulsatility index (UA-PI) to measure flow through the umbilical artery:
End-diastolic flow velocity (continuous, absent, reversed) reflects increases in placental resistance
Essential in surveillance of the growth restricted fetus

Amniotic fluid volume

18
Q

management of small baby

A

Identifying those at risk of SGA

Confirm dates

Assess growth by ultrasound

Review measurements

Aspirin is given to those at risk of pre-eclampsia

Treating modifiable risk factors (e.g. stop smoking)

Serial growth scans to monitor growth

Early delivery where growth is static, or there are other concerns

19
Q

investigations for SGA

A
blood pressure
urine dipstick 
uterine artery doppler scanning
detailed fetal anatomy by fetal medicine
karyotyping for chromosomal abnormalities
testing for infections
20
Q

macrosomia weight at birth

A

> 4.5kg

21
Q

causes of increased symphysio-fundal height in singleton pregnancy

A

uterine fibroids
pelvic mass pushing up the uterus
polyhydramnios
obesity

22
Q

causes of macrosomia

A

Constitutional

Maternal diabetes

Previous macrosomia

Maternal obesity or rapid weight gain

Overdue

Male baby

23
Q

maternal factors causing macrosomia

A

Diabetes

Obesity

Increased maternal age

Multiparity

Large stature

24
Q

fetal factors causing macrosomia

A

constitutional
male gender
post-maturity
genetic disorder

25
Q

macrosomia risks to mother

A
Shoulder dystocia 
Failure to progress 
Perineal tears 
Operative delivery: Instrumental delivery or caesarean 
Postpartum haemorrhage 
Uterine rupture (rare) 
Prolonged labour  
Genital tract trauma
26
Q

macrosomia risks to fetus

A

Birth injury (Erbs palsy, clavicular fracture, fetal distress and hypoxia)

Perinatal asphyxia from difficult delivery

Shoulder dystocia/ Erb’s palsy

Metabolic syndrome

Neonatal hypoglycaemia

Obesity in childhood and later life

Type 2 diabetes in adulthood

27
Q

investigations for large baby

A

USS: polyhydramnios
OGTT: gestational diabetes

28
Q

prematurity weeks

A

Under 28 weeks: extreme preterm

28 – 32 weeks: very preterm

32 – 37 weeks: moderate to late preterm

29
Q

prematurity associations

A
Social deprivation 
Smoking 
Alcohol 
Drugs 
Overweight or underweight mother 
Maternal co-morbidities 
Twins 
Personal or family history of prematurity
30
Q

risk factors for prematurity

A

Spontaneous pre-term birth

Mid-trimester loss (16+)

PPROM

Cervical trauma