Topic 3 - 11-14 weeks scan Flashcards
What is gastrulation?
bilaminar disk to a trilaminar disk with the three primary germ cell layers: ectoderm, mesoderm, and endoderm
What is neurulation?
The formation of the neural plate and its closure to form the neural tube
process begins in the fifth week in the thoracic region and extends caudally and cranially, resulting in complete closure by the end of the sixth week (day 42).
Failure of closure of the neural tube results in neural tube defects.
When does the primitive heart form?
Week 5. two cardiac tubes develop from splanchnic mesodermal cells. By the end of the fifth week, these tubes begin to pump
What are the two things that happen in week six of development?
By the end of the sixth week, blood flow is unidirectional
The primitive gut forms
What are the three things that happen in week 8?
The midgut herniates into the umbilical cord from week 8 through the end of week 12
The rectum separates from the urogenital sinus by the end of week 8, and the anal membrane perforates by the end of week 10.
The metanephros, or primitive kidneys, ascend from the pelvis, starting at approximately week 8, but do not reach their adult position until week 11.
When do all internal and external structures appear in the adult form?
all internal and external structures appear in the adult form during the embryonic period, which ends at 10 menstrual weeks
When does the heart attain its definitive form?
End of week 8
When does the peripheral vascular system develop?
Week 10
When are Limbs are formed with separate fingers and toes?
Week 10
By what time have all congenital malformations except abnormalities of the genitalia happened?
Week 10
By hat time have genitalia formed?
External genitalia are still in a sexless state at the end of week 10 and do not reach mature fetal form until the end of week 14.
What happens to he CRL between 11-14 weeks?
It doubles
On sonography what is visible at week 5?
Gestational sac and yolk sac
On sonography what is visible at week 6?
Fetus on the edge of the yolk sac.
CRL 2mm
On sonography what is visible at week 7?
Fetus separate from the yolk sac
CRL 10mm
On sonography what is visible at week 8?
Fetal movements, limb buds, rhombencephalon, amniotic membrane
CRL 18mm
On sonography what is visible at week 9?
Brain division, Limbs visible, fetal movements seen.
CRL 25mm
On sonography what is visible at week 10?
Profile seen, physiological exomphalos
On sonography what is visible at week 11?
NT measureable, hands and feet seen, brain, choroid, lat vents
CRL 45mm
On sonography what is visible at week 12?
NT measurable, exomphalos gone, abdominal wall in tact, fingers visible, bladder fills, stomach visible
CRL 60mm
On sonography what is visible at week 13?
As for week 12
On sonography what is visible at week 14?
Heart detail visible
What are the three major points that should be remembered when considering first trimester pathology?
1) normal embryologic/fetal development may mimic pathology
2) abnormal embryos/fetuses may appear normal early in pregnancy
3) discrepancies between dates and embryo size may be the only visible manifestation of pathology in some first-trimester examinations.
What is the rhombencephalon?
During the sixth week, three primary brain vesicles form: the prosencephalon (forebrain), the mesencephalon (midbrain), and the rhombencephalon (hindbrain).
earliest cystic structure seen in the posterior aspect of the embryonic head at 6 to 8 weeks’ gestation represents the normal embryonic cystic rhombencephalon
It later forms the normal fourth ventricle
Why is recognising the rhombencephalon important?
should not be mistaken for a posterior fossa cyst of pathologic importance
How do the lateral ventricles appear during development?
9 weeks, the lateral ventricles identified as two small cystic spaces
11 weeks more evident
12 weeks the lateral ventricles extend almost to the inner table of the skull only a small rim of cerebral cortex can be demonstrated to surround them.
choroid plexus is echogenic and fills the lateral ventricles completely except for the frontal horns
What is the normal process of physiological anterior abdominal wall herniation?
midgut normally herniates into the umbilical cord at the beginning of the eighth week
midgut rotates 90 degrees counter clockwise and then returns to the abdomen during the 12th week.
What does a physiological exomphalos look like on sonography?
herniated bowel appears as a small, echogenic mass (6-9 mm) protruding into the cord at approximately 8 weeks (CRL, 17-20 mm)
Follow-up examinations reveal reduction of the hernia between 10 and 12 weeks
20% of normal pregnancies, the herniated bowel may still be found outside the fetal abdomen at 12 weeks.