Abstract
BACKGROUND: Real-time ultrasound scanning has made it possible to ascertain whether the fetus is alive in women who have bleeding in early pregnancy. Portable ultrasound machines are capable of detecting fetal heart movement reliably after the ninth week of pregnancy, and can be used in a general practice setting. An ultrasound clinic was set up in a health centre and 22 general practitioners in the local area could refer women patients with bleeding in early pregnancy. AIM: A study was carried out among women with bleeding in early pregnancy to compare the presence of fetal heart movement detected at the initial ultrasound scan with subsequent fetal survival during the first 20 weeks of pregnancy. METHOD: Data were collected during a three-year period on women referred opportunistically by their general practitioners. An abdominal scan was performed on the same day or the day after presentation and the presence or absence of fetal heart movement recorded. Diagnoses and outcome at 20 weeks were ascertained from patients' health centre records. RESULTS: A total of 240 women with bleeding in early pregnancy were scanned and at the first examination fetal heart movement was detected in 115 of the fetuses (48%). Three fetuses were subsequently miscarried spontaneously while 109 of the 115 continued to the 20th week (95%). Three fetuses had gross abnormalities and these pregnancies were subsequently terminated. No heart movement was detected in 117 fetuses (49%); all were subsequently miscarried. For eight women scanned it was not clear whether fetal heart movement was present. Three of these eight pregnancies survived to the 20th week. Predictive values of fetal survival to the 20th week of pregnancy from fetal heart movement detected by general practice ultrasound scan for women with bleeding in early pregnancy showed a sensitivity of 97% and a specificity of 98%. CONCLUSION: If fetal heart movement is detected at the initial scan, approximately 19 out of every 20 viable pregnancies (those in which the fetus appears normal) will not miscarry before the 20th week. Using ultrasound in general practice it was possible to identify promptly those women with bleeding whose fetus was alive. For those women found to have a non-viable pregnancy, appropriate arrangements could be made at an early stage in the knowledge that a miscarriage was inevitable, thus avoiding unnecessary bed rest for the patient. Where fetal heart movement was detected, there was a good prognosis and thus women could be given strong reassurance.