| Literature DB >> 27278992 |
Tharangrut Hanprasertpong1, Uiko Hanaoka1, Xia Zhang1, Nobuhiro Mori1, Eisuke Inubashiri1, Kenji Kanenishi1, Chizu Yamashiro1, Hirokazu Tanaka1, Atsuko Shiota1, Toshihiro Yanagihara1, Toshiyuki Hata2.
Abstract
We present a case of fetal Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome diagnosed by conventional two-dimensional and three-dimensional ultrasonography. Conventional two-dimensional ultrasonography revealed a diaphragmatic hernia, nuchal edema, and suspected hypospadias. Three-dimensional ultrasonography clearly showed a flattening of the face, a high forehead, a broad nasal bridge continuing to the forehead, exophthalmos, and micrognathia (resembling the appearance of a Greek warrior helmet), but conventional two-dimensional ultrasonography did not depict these findings. Prenatal chromosomal analysis confirmed the diagnosis of Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome [46XY, del(4)(p15.2)]. Here we demonstrate how three-dimensional ultrasonography provided a novel visual depiction of the facial dysmorphism, which helped substantially in prenatal counseling.Entities:
Keywords: Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome; prenatal diagnosis; three-dimensional; ultrasound
Year: 2008 PMID: 27278992 DOI: 10.1007/s10396-008-0182-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Ultrason (2001) ISSN: 1346-4523 Impact factor: 1.314