A Preliminary Study on the Safety of Elastography during Pregnancy: Hypoacusia, Anthropometry, and Apgar Score in Newborns
Metadata
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Mdpi
Materia
Elastography ARFE Fetal safety Ultrasound safety Hypoacusia Anthropometrical measurements
Date
2020-11-18Referencia bibliográfica
Massó, P., Melchor, J., Rus, G., & Molina, F. S. (2020). A Preliminary Study on the Safety of Elastography during Pregnancy: Hypoacusia, Anthropometry, and Apgar Score in Newborns. Diagnostics, 10(11), 967. [doi:10.3390/diagnostics10110967]
Sponsorship
Ministry of Education DPI2017-85359-R UNGR15-CE-3664 PI16/00339; Carlos III Feder fund; Junta de Andalucía PIN-0030-2017 PI-0107-2017; Spanish Government TEC2014-57394-P; MNat Scientific Unit of Excellence UCE.PP2017.03Abstract
Transient or acoustic radiation force elastography (ARFE) is becoming the most extended
technology to assess cervical effacement, additionally to the Bishop test and conventional ultrasound.
However, a debate on the fetal safety has been opened due to the high intensity focused beam emitted
to produce shear waves. This work is aimed at providing preliminary data to assess clinical effects of
fetal exposure. A follow-up study in newborns of 42 women exposed to ARFE during pregnancy
was carried out to explore neonatal hypoacusia, Apgar test, and anthropometry. No hypoacusia
cases attributable to ARFE were observed. The Apgar test at five minutes scored normally in all the
newborns. Comparisons between anthropometric measurements showed no significant statistically
differences. The results preclude to state the harmfulness nor the safety of ARFE. However, given
the concern on the high level of energy and the potential risk of harmful bioeffects, larger studies
are recommended.