Cases reported "Fetal Resorption"

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11/12. A false-positive diagnosis of turner syndrome by amniocentesis.

    A 45,X karyotype was observed in all cells examined from an amniotic fluid sample taken at 16 weeks' gestation from a 37-year-old patient referred because of her age. Following termination of the pregnancy, all cells examined from fetal tissues (cardiac blood, skin, and muscle) showed a 46,XX karyotype. The most likely explanation for the discordant results is thought to be a dizygotic twin pregnancy with a normal fetus and an empty sac, the latter being sampled at amniocentesis resulting in a 45,X karyotype. ( info)

12/12. A hypothesis for the aetiology of spastic cerebral palsy--the vanishing twin.

    The aetiology of spastic cerebral palsy (CP), in the majority of cases, is not known but the general consensus is that cerebral impairment occurs prepartum. In monochorionic twin pregnancies, death of one twin late in gestation is recognised as being an important risk factor for the surviving cotwin to have CP. It has been suggested that a significant proportion of singletons with spastic CP may be the result of death of a cotwin in the second half of gestation. In this paper it is hypothesised that spastic CP of unknown aetiology is the result of the death of a monochorionic cotwin and that the death of the cotwin may impair the neurological development of the survivor throughout gestation. If so, vanishing-twin syndrome, which is now a recognised phenomenon revealed by ultrasound examination in early pregnancy, is important in the aetiology of spastic CP. ( info)
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