| Literature DB >> 30785656 |
Misha Bhat1, Kostas Haris2,3, Sebastian Bidhult3,4, Petru Liuba1, Anthony H Aletras2,3, Erik Hedström3,5.
Abstract
Limited visualization of the fetal heart and vessels by fetal ultrasound due to suboptimal fetal position, patient habitus and skeletal calcification may lead to missed diagnosis, overdiagnosis and parental uncertainty. Counselling and delivery planning may in those cases also be tentative. The recent fetal cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) reconstruction method utilizing tiny golden-angle iGRASP (iterative Golden-angle RAdial Sparse Parallel MRI) allows for cine imaging of the fetal heart for use in clinical practice. This case describes an unbalanced common atrioventricular canal where limited ultrasound image quality and visibility of the aortic arch precluded confirming or ruling out presence of a ventricular septal defect. Need of prostaglandins or neonatal intervention was thus uncertain. Cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging confirmed ultrasound findings and added value by ruling out a significant ventricular septal defect and diagnosing arch hypoplasia. This confirmed the need of patient relocation for delivery at a paediatric cardiothoracic surgery centre and prostaglandins could be initiated before the standard postnatal ultrasound. The applied CMR method can thus improve diagnosis of complicated fetal cardiac malformation and has direct clinical impact.Entities:
Keywords: zzm321990iGRASPzzm321990; cardiac MRI; cardiac malformation; clinical application; fetal CMR; fetal cardiology
Year: 2019 PMID: 30785656 PMCID: PMC6850003 DOI: 10.1111/cpf.12566
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Physiol Funct Imaging ISSN: 1475-0961 Impact factor: 2.273
Figure 1The fetal echocardiogram at 32 + 6 weeks gestational age indicated an unbalanced common atrioventricular canal favouring the right ventricle. Hypoechoic dropout (a) and flow by colour Doppler (b) in the inlet septum region gave the appearance of a possible ventricular septal defect (arrows), but this is a common area for hypoechoic dropout and diagnosis is uncertain. LV = left ventricle; RV = right ventricle.
Figure 2Fetal iGRASP cardiovascular cine magnetic resonance imaging in 4‐chamber (a) and short‐axis (c) views, clearly showing the unbalanced common atrioventricular canal favouring the right ventricle, and ruling out a moderate or large inlet ventricular septal defect or other ventricular septal defect. Images are shown without interpolation. The corresponding postnatal echocardiogram acquired ten days after delivery are shown for comparison in 4‐chamber (b) and short‐axis (d) views, confirming the prenatal diagnosis by iGRASP cardiovascular cine magnetic resonance imaging. LV = left ventricle; RV = right ventricle.
Figure 3Fetal balanced steady‐state free‐precession (bSSFP) magnetic resonance imaging of the aortic arch (a) showed a hypoplastic aortic arch with minimum diameter 2·8 mm (arrow) in the aortic isthmus. The left subclavian artery is denoted (arrowhead). Images are shown without interpolation. The presence of a hypoplastic arch was confirmed by echocardiography 10 days after delivery (b).