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1.
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-137471

ABSTRACT

The purpose of this study was to develop reference centiles of head circumference (HC) for Thai fetuses, and to compare them with previously published data. Normal pregnant women who attend antenatal clinic at Siriraj Hospital provided the study population. A total of 621 cases between 12 - 41 weeks of gestation were recruited. Gestational age was determined by menstrual history which had been regular for at least 3 months without contraception prior to current pregnancy, and uterine size which was compatible with menstrual age at the first time of examination. Each fetus was measured once at a randomly assigned gestational age specifically for the purpose of this study. Due to unfavorable fetal position in some cases, HC data were only available in 609 measurements. Stepwise linear regression models were fitted separately to estimate the mean and standard deviation as functions of gestational age. A reference centile chart was constructed from both equations, assuming the data were normally distributed. A new reference centile chart for HC is presented and compared with previously published data. Our derived centile were lower than those from Western studies, which may partly be due to racial differences. This emphasizes the need to develop fetal biometric charts specific to each region.

2.
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-137469

ABSTRACT

A cross-sectional study was conducted in order to construct a reference chart for Thai fetal upper extremities long bone (humerus, radius, and ulna). A total of 621 normal pregnant women, who attended the antenatal clinic at Siriraj Hospital, Mahidol University, Bangkok, were recruited between 12 and 41 weeks of gestation. We identified pregnant women who had previous regular menstrual period for at least 3 months without contraception prior to current pregnancy; and uterine size at the time of examination was compatible with menstrual age. Each fetus was measured only once at a randomly assigned gestational age specifically for the purpose of this study. Due to unfavorable fetal position in some cases, data were available in only 482 measurements of the humerus, and 443 measurements of the radius and ulna respectively. Linear regression models were fitted separately to estimate the mean and standard deviation at each gestational age for each parameter. New reference centiles were constructed from both equations, assuming the data were normally distributed. This will provide more reliable reference data to be utilized in the assessment of gestational age and in the diagnosis of upper limb deformities during fetal period.

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