Circulation, Vol 75, 406-412, Copyright © 1987 by American Heart Association
JC Huhta, KJ Moise, DJ Fisher, DS Sharif, N Wasserstrum and C Martin
Pulmonary hypertension may occur in the fetus in the presence of
constriction of the ductus arteriosus. The feasibility of detection and
quantitation of fetal ductal constriction by Doppler echocardiography was
assessed in an animal preparation in which ductal constriction was created
in the fetal lamb with a variable ligature causing varying degrees of fetal
pulmonary hypertension (fetal pulmonary arterial systolic pressure 57 to 97
mm Hg and ductal gradient 9 to 42 mm Hg). Comparison of blinded,
continuous-wave peak Doppler velocity (V) measurements of the ductal
gradient with the modified Bernoulli assumption (gradient = 4V2) compared
well with direct catheter measurements of instantaneous peak systolic
gradient (r = .99, catheter = 0.95 X Doppler + 0.6), peak-to-peak gradient
(r = .97), and mid- diastolic gradient (r = .85). Ductal constriction was
characterized by an increase in the peak systolic and diastolic velocities.
The normal human fetal ductus arteriosus blood flow velocity pattern was
assessed by pulsed Doppler techniques in 25 normal human fetuses after 20
weeks gestation. The peak systolic flow velocity in the ductus arteriosus
measured by image-directed pulsed Doppler echocardiography ranged from 50
to 141 cm/sec (mean 80 cm/sec) and increased with gestational age (r =
.50). Diastolic velocity in the ductus arteriosus was consistently directed
toward the descending aorta and ranged from 6 to 30 cm/sec. The ductal
systolic velocities were the highest blood flow velocities in the fetal
cardiovascular system. Application of these techniques to fetuses whose
mothers were receiving indomethacin for treatment of premature labor at 30
to 31 weeks gestation confirmed this method to be sensitive for detection
of fetal ductal constriction, which developed in three fetuses.(ABSTRACT
TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
ARTICLES
Detection and quantitation of constriction of the fetal ductus arteriosus by Doppler echocardiography
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