Small for dates Flashcards
What is IUGR?
Slowing of fetal growth such that it fails to reach growth potential.
What is the aetiology of IUGR?
Maternal: HTN, PREC, DM, DU, smoking, CKD, thrombophilia, maternal age high.
Fetal: chromosomal abnormalities, infection (CMV/Rubella) multiple pregnanct
Other: placental insufficiency.
What are the RFs of IUGR?
As for aetiology, Hx of IUGR.
What is the epidemiology of IUGR?
3-5% of pregnancies.
What is the Hx/Exam of IUGR?
Any of the aetiological factors noted above, enquire on fetal movements.
Abdomen: low fundal height.
What pathology is IUGR?
Symmetrical IUGR: head and body proportionately small, normally early onset, seenin chromosomal anomalies.
Asymmetrical IUGR: later onset, abdominal circumference disproportionately smaller than head, seen with placental insufficiency.
What Ix would you do for IUGR?
USS: anomaly scan, growth (abdominal and head circumference), loquor volume (OGHMN?) umbilical doppler (abnormal if end diastolic flow absent or reversed). MCA doppler (redistribution of blood to brain).
CTG: fetal wellbeing.
What is the Mx of IUGR?
Normal doppler resultsL aim for delivery at >37wk, unless anomalies arise. Regular monitoring.
Abnormal doppler: Steroids if pre term, consider delivery, paediatrician at delivery, continuous CTG intrapartum.
What are the complications/ prognosis of IUGR?
Tillbirth, PTL, intrapartum fetal distress, asphyxia, meconium aspiration, postnatal hypoglycaemia, neurodevelopmental delay, high risk of t2DM in life.
Increased perinatal morbidity and mortality, increased neurodevelopmental delay if onset <26/40.
What is small for gestational age?
derived from birth weight -> describes a baby with AC or EFW ≤10th centile for GA
o 5% of pregnancies
o EFW = Estimated Foetal Weight; AC = Abdominal Circumference; GA = Gestational Age
What are RFs for SGA?
o Biggest RFs (maternal): previous stillbirth > APLS > renal disease
o Foetal – chromosomal abnormalities (-> symmetrical IUGR), infection (CMV, rubella), multiple pregnancy
o Other – placental insufficiency (-> asymmetrical IUGR)
What Ix do you do for SGA?
o 1st -> if ≥1 major risk factor or ≥3 minor risk factors, reassess at 20 weeks
o 2nd ->at 20 weeks, if still at risk, consider…
- > Minor risk (≥3 RFs) -> uterine artery doppler (20-24w) -> if abnormal, serial USS from 26-28w
- > Major risk (≥1 RF) -> foetal size and umbilical artery doppler (serial USS from 26-28w)
o If SGA or IUGR, ultrasound biometry (biparietal diameter, head circumference, abdominal circumference and femur length) and umbilical artery doppler serial measurements (every 2 weeks) should be taken
o Screen for congenital infections
What is the management for SGA?
o Smoking, alcohol and drugs should be stopped
o Low-dose aspirin may have some role in preventing (not reversing) IUGR in high-risk pregnancies
o Monitoring:
1st -> SFH or risk status determined (at booking or any antenatal appointment)
2nd -> confirm SGA with foetal biometry (20w)
3rd -> uterine artery doppler (20-24w)
• Normal -> repeat scans every 2 weeks (from 20-24w onwards)
• Abnormal:
o Serial growth scans every week (from 26-28w onwards)
o Doppler ultrasound scans can be performed twice a week (umbilical artery flow)
o Delivery:
Indications for IMMEDIATE DELIVERY:
• Abnormal CTG (and reduced foetal movements)
• Reversal of end-diastolic flow
Delivery by 37 weeks is usually necessary -> dependent on severity and gestation
• Steroids should be given <36 weeks
• Consultant-led clinics and decision-making