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Ultrasound Scans: Cause for Concern
Posted by: Dr. Mercola
February 19 2003 | 3,211 views

By Dr. Sarah Buckley
E-mail: sarahjbuckley@uqconnect.net

When I was pregnant with my first baby in 1990, I decided against having a scan. This was a rather unusual decision as my partner and I are both doctors and had even done pregnancy scans ourselves--rather ineptly, but sometimes usefully--while training in GP obstetrics a few years earlier.

What influenced me the most was my feeling that I would lose something important as a mother if I allowed someone to test my baby. I knew that if a minor or uncertain problem showed up, which is not uncommon, I would be obliged to return again and again and after a while it would feel as if my baby belonged to the system and not to me.

In the years since then I have had three more unscanned babies and have read many articles and research papers about ultrasound. Nothing I have read has made me reconsider my decision. Although ultrasound may sometimes be useful when specific problems are suspected, my conclusion is that it is at best ineffective and at worse dangerous when used as a ‘screening tool’ for every pregnant woman and her baby.

Ultrasound: Past and Present

Ultrasound was developed during WWII to detect enemy submarines and was subsequently used in the steel industry. In July 1955 Glasgow surgeon Ian Donald borrowed an industrial machine and, using beefsteaks as controls, began to experiment with abdominal tumors that he had removed from his patients.

He discovered that different tissues gave different patterns of ‘echo,’ leading him to realize that ultrasound offered a revolutionary way to look into the previously mysterious world of the growing baby (Wagner 1995).

This new technology spread rapidly into clinical obstetrics. Commercial machines became available in 1963 (De Crespigny 1996), and by the late 1970s ultrasound had become a routine part of obstetric care (Oakley 1986). Today, ultrasound is seen as safe and effective, and scanning has become a rite of passage for pregnant women in developed countries. Here in Australia, it is estimated that 99 percent of babies are scanned at least once in pregnancy--mostly as a routine prenatal ultrasound (RPU) at 4 to 5 months.

However, there is growing concern as to its safety and usefulness. UK consumer activist Beverley Beech has called RPU "the biggest uncontrolled experiment in history" (Beech 1993), and the Cochrane Collaborative Database--the peak scientific authority in medicine--concludes that " ... no clear benefit in terms of a substantive outcome measure like perinatal mortality [number of babies dying around the time of birth] can yet be discerned to result from the routine use of ultrasound" (Neilson 1999).

This seems a very poor reward for the huge costs involved. In 1997 to 1998, for example, $39 million was paid by the federal government for pregnancy scans--an enormous expense compared to $54 million for all other obstetric medicare costs. This figure does not include the additional costs paid by the woman herself.

In 1987, UK radiologist H.D.Meire, who had been performing pregnancy scans for 20 years, commented, "The casual observer might be forgiven for wondering why the medical profession is now involved in the wholesale examination of pregnant patients with machines emanating vastly different powers of energy, which is not proven to be harmless to obtain information, which is not proven to be of any clinical value by operators who are not certified as competent to perform the operations" (Meire 1987). The situation today is unchanged on every count.

The 1999 Senate Committee report ‘Rocking the Cradle’ recommended that the cost-benefit of routine scanning, and of current ultrasound practices, be formally assessed. Recommendations were also made to develop guidelines for the safe use of all obstetric ultrasound, as well as for the development of standards for the training of ultrasonographers (see below). So far, none of these recommendations have been implemented (Senate Committee 1999).

What is Ultrasound?

The term ‘ultrasound’ refers to the ultra-high frequency soundwaves used for diagnostic scanning. These waves travel at 10 to 20 million cycles per second, compared to 10 to 20 thousand cycles per second for audible sound (De Crespigny 1996).

Ultrasound waves are emitted by a transducer, the part of the machine that is put onto the body, and a picture of the underlying tissues is built up from the pattern of echo waves that return. Hard surfaces such as bone will return a stronger echo than soft tissue or fluids, giving the bony skeleton a white appearance on the screen.

Ordinary scans use pulses of ultrasound, which last only a fraction of a second, with the interval between waves being used by the machine to interpret the echo that returns. In contrast, Doppler techniques, which are used in specialized scans, fetal monitors and hand-held fetal stethoscopes (sonicaids), feature continuous waves, giving much higher levels of exposure than ‘pulsed’ ultrasound. Many women do not realize that the small machines used to listen to their baby’s heartbeat are actually using Doppler ultrasound, albeit with low dose parameters.

More recently, ultrasonographers have been using vaginal ultrasound, where the transducer is placed high in the vagina, much closer to the developing baby. This is used mostly in early pregnancy when abdominal scans can give poor pictures. However, with vaginal ultrasound, there is little intervening tissue to shield the baby, who is at a vulnerable stage of development, and exposure levels will be high.

Having a vaginal ultrasound is not a pleasant procedure for the woman; the term ‘diagnostic rape’ was coined to describe how some women experience vaginal scans.

Another recent application for ultrasound is the ‘nuchal (neck) translucency test,’ where the thickness of the skin fold at the back of the baby’s head is measured at around 3 months; a thick nuchal fold makes the baby more likely, statistically, to have Down’s syndrome. When the baby’s risk is estimated to be over 1 in 250, a definitive test is recommended.

This involves taking some of the baby’s tissue by amniocentesis or chorionic villus sampling. Around 19 out of 20 babies diagnosed as ‘high risk’ by nuchal translucency will not turn out to be affected by Down’s syndrome, and their mothers will have experienced several weeks of unnecessary anxiety. A nuchal translucency scan does not detect all babies affected by Down’s syndrome.

Information Gained From Ultrasound

Ultrasound is mainly used for two purposes in pregnancy--either to investigate a possible problem at any stage of pregnancy or as a routine scan at around 18 weeks.

If there is bleeding in early pregnancy, for example, ultrasound may predict whether miscarriage is inevitable. Later in pregnancy, ultrasound can be used when a baby is not growing or when a breech baby or twins are suspected. In these cases, the information gained from ultrasound can be very useful in decision-making for the woman and her caregivers.

However the use of routine prenatal ultrasound (RPU) is more controversial, as this involves scanning (or screening) all pregnant women in the hope of improving the outcome for some mothers and babies.

The timing of routine scans (18 to 20 weeks) is chosen for pragmatic reasons. It offers a reasonably accurate due date--although dating is most accurate at the early stages of pregnancy when babies vary the least in size--and the baby is big enough to show most of the abnormalities that are detectable on ultrasound.

However, at this stage the EDD (expected date of delivery) is only accurate to a week both side, and some studies have suggested that an early examination, or calculations based on a woman’s menstrual cycle, can be as accurate as RPU (Olsen and Clausen, 1997; Kieler et al, 1993).

And while many women are reassured by a normal scan, RPU actually detects only between 17 percent and 85 percent of the 1 in 50 babies that have major abnormalities at birth (Ewigman 1993, Luck 1992).

A recent study from Brisbane showed that ultrasound at a major women’s hospital missed around 40 percent of abnormalities, with most of these being difficult or impossible to detect (Chan 1997). Major causes of intellectual disability such as cerebral palsy and Down’s syndrome are unlikely to be picked up on a routine scan, as are heart and kidney abnormalities.

When an abnormality is detected, there is a small chance that the finding is a false positive, where the ultrasound diagnosis is wrong. A UK survey showed that for 1 out of every 200 babies aborted for major abnormalities, the diagnosis on post-mortem was less severe than predicted by ultrasound, and the termination was probably unjustified.

In this survey, 2.4 percent of the babies diagnosed with major malformations but not aborted had conditions that were significantly over or under-diagnosed (Brand 1994).

There are also many cases of error with more minor abnormalities, which can cause anxiety and repeated scans, and there are some conditions that have been seen to spontaneously resolve (eg see Saari-Kemppainen 1990).

Along with false positives there are also uncertain cases where the ultrasound findings cannot be easily interpreted, and the outcome for the baby is not known. In one study involving women at high risk, almost 10 percent of scans were uncertain (Sparling 1988).

This can create immense anxiety for the woman and her family, and the worry may not be allayed by the birth of a normal baby. In the same study, mothers with "questionable" diagnoses still had this anxiety 3 months after the birth of their baby.

In some cases of uncertainty, the doubt can be resolved by further tests such as amniocentesis. In this situation, there may be an up to two weeks wait for results, during which time a mother has to decide if she would terminate the pregnancy if an abnormality is found. Even mothers who receive reassuring news have felt that this process has interfered with their relationship with their baby (see Brookes, 1995).

As well as estimating the EDD and checking for major abnormalities, RPU can also identify a low-lying placenta (placenta praevia) and detect the presence of more than one baby at an early stage of pregnancy. However, 19 out of 20 women who have placenta praevia detected on an early scan will be needlessly worried: the placenta will effectively move up and not cause problems at the birth. Furthermore, detection of placenta praevia by RPU has not been found to be safer than detection in labor (Saari-Kemppainen, 1990).

No improvement in outcome has been shown for multiple pregnancies either; the vast majority of these will be detected before labor, even without RPU (MIDIRS 1995).

The American College of Obstetricians, in their guidelines on routine ultrasound in low-risk pregnancy, concludes "In a population of women with low-risk pregnancies, neither a reduction in perinatal morbidity [harm to babies around the time of birth] and mortality nor a lower rate of unnecessary interventions can be expected from routine diagnostic ultrasound. Thus ultrasound should be performed for specific indications in low-risk pregnancy" (ACOG 1997).

[ Continued on Page 2 ]





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