Pathological Pregnancies: Results of amniotic fluid studies and fetal outcome

Late amniocenteses (>20 weeks' gestation) were performed in 114 pregnancies with no a priori genetic risk, but referred because of abnormal clinical and/or ultrasound findings suggesting fetal malformations. Reasons for referral included polyhydramnios (51 cases), oligohydramnios (15 cases), fetal growth retardation (FGR) (16 cases) and abnormal fetal ultrasound findings excluding anencephaly (32 cases). In 42 of these cases, referral was motivated by a combination of the above abnormal findings. When polyhydramnios was the sole anomaly (25 cases), 5 fetuses were malformed (20%), abnormal fetal karyotype and/or elevated amniotic fluid alphafetoprotein (AFP) were demonstrated in 2 cases. Oligohydramnios was the sole anomaly in one case; the infant died of prematurity. Fetal growth retardation was the sole anomaly in 14 cases, 11 otherwise normal newborns were small for date, 2 died at birth and 1 was malformed (1/14, 7%). In this group all fetal karyotypes were normal and in 2 cases amniotic fluid AFP were increased. In the 32 pregnancies without abnormal amniotic fluid volume and/or FGR and with fetal malformation(s) suggested by ultrasound, all malformations except one (ovarian cyst possibly ruptured during birth) were confirmed at birth, amniotic fluid AFP was elevated, and/or karyotype was abnormal in 6 cases. In 42 pregnancies where more than one alarm sign was present, abnormal karyotype and/or elevated amniotic fluid AFP level were recorded in 21 of the 39 cases where amniocentesis was performed, 33 fetuses were malformed (79%) and 13 died in the perinatal period (31%). The high incidence of abnormal results of amniocentesis found in this survey of pathological pregnancies, particularly in those with multiple alarm signs, emphasizes the need for amniocentesis in these situations.

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