Chapter 61: Fetal Thorax
What is the best ultrasonic determination for predicting pulmonary hypoplasia?
((chest area- heart area) X 100)/chest area
The mature fetus spends almost ______ of its time breathing
1/3
Pleural fluid is rarely encountered before the
15th week of gestation EXCEPT in association with Down or Turners syndrome
Fetal breathing movements are considered absent if no such fetal activity is noted during the ______ minute observation period
20
When does progressive flattening of the epithelial cells lining the air spaces, which allows closer apposition of capillaries to the fluid-filled air space lumen and results in further development of the air-blood barrier necessary for efficient gas exchange after birth occur?
After 24 weeks
When does a dramatic increase in the number and complexity of air spaces and vascular structures occur?
Between 16-24 weeks
______ may be used to detect fetal breathing through the nostrils
Color flow Doppler
What is a consistent method of diagnosing pulmonary hypoplasia?
a decreased ratio of lung weight to body weight
The thorax is normally slightly smaller than the
abdominal cavity
Bronchogenic cysts occur as a result of
abnormal budding of the foregut
What is the single most important determinant of fetal viability?
adequacy of pulmonary development
What is pleural effusion?
an accumulation of fluid within the pleural cavity that may appear as an isolated lesion or secondary to multiple fetal anomalies
What may the fetus have if they have a significant narrow diameter of the chest?
asphxiating thoracic dystrophy
When does the gut move back into the abdominal cavity?
between 10-12 weeks
When does the normal number of bronchi form?
between 16-20 weeks
When does the muscular diaphragm form?
between 6-14 weeks of gestation
CCAM may communicate with the
bronchial tree
What is the most common lung cyst detected prenatally?
bronchogenic cyst
CCAM is one of the
bronchopulmonary foregut malformations
Abnormal position of the heart may indicate the presence of a
chest mass, pleural effusion, cardiac malformation
What is the most common reason for a pleural effusion?
chylothorax
What forms the upper margins of the thoracic cavity?
clavicles
The ratio of thoracic circumference to abdominal circumference remains _____ throughout the pregnancy
constant
Normal sonographic findings of diaphragm
curvilinear hypoechoic structure coursing anteriorly to posterioly
What does pulmonary hypoplasia result in
decrease in organ size and weight
Pulmonary hypoplasia is caused by a
decrease in the numbers of lung cells, airways, and alveoli
What is the most posterior aspect of the diaphragm?
derived from body wall
The base of the heart lies horizontal to the
diaphragm
What forms the lower margins of the thoracic cavity?
diaphragm
What separates the thoracic cavity from the abdomen?
diaphragm
Lung cysts
echo free masses that replace normal lung parenchyma
Sonographic appearance of pleural effusion
echo-free peripheral masses on one or both sides of the fetal heart effusions conform to the thoracic cavity and often compress lung tissue lung appears to float in the fluid
Sonographic findings of congenital bronchial atresia
echogenic pulmonary mass lesion
Sonographic findings of pulmonary sequestration
echogenic solid mass resembling lung tissue rarely occurs below diaphragm normal intraabdominal anatomy
Sonographic appearance of diaphragm
echogenic, smooth hypoechoic muscular margin between the fetal liver or spleen and the lungs
What causes CCAM?
embryogenetic alteration in the developing lung during the first 8-9 gestational weeks
Normally, the primitive diaphragm is intact by the
end of 8th menstrual week
Which has a poorer prognosis, intralobar or extralobar sequestration?
extralobar- bc of associated anomalies and hydrops
CCAM type 2 lesions are associated with
fetal and/or chromosomal abnormalities in 25% of cases (renal agencies, pulmonary anomalies, diaphragmatic hernia)
A small percentage of infants have pulmonary hypoplasia with no
fetal or uterine problem
What should be seen caudal to the diaphragm?
fetal stomach and liver
What chain of events forms the diaphragm?
fusion of the septum transversum, pleuroperitoneal membranes, dorsal mesentery of the esophagus and body wall
Prognosis of pulmonary hypoplasia
grave 80% die after birth
The lungs at birth are about _____ with fluid derived from the amniotic cavity, tracheal glands and lungs
half full
The lungs serve as the lateral borders for the
heart
Congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH)
herniation of the abdominal viscera into the chest that results from a congenital defect in the fetal diaphragm
Texture of fetal lungs
homogeneous with moderate echogenicity
What often accompanies chylothorax?
hydramnios- resulting from esophageal compression
What is pulmonary sequestration associated with?
hydrops and polyhydramnios, diaphragmatic hernia, gastrointestinal anomalies
Pleural effusion AKA
hydrothorax
Pleural effusions may result from
immune or nonimmune causes congestive heart failure chromosomal abnormalities cardiac masses
What results in lethal pulmonary hypoplasia?
kidney abnormalities IUGR PROM
Congenital bronchial atresia is found most commonly in the
left upper lobe
Early in gestation, the lungs are similar to or slightly less echogenic than the
liver
Congenital lobar emphysema
lobar overinflation of the lung without destruction of alveolar septa
Ultrasound can NOT be used to assess
lung maturity
What should be seen cephalad to the diaphragm?
lungs and heart
CCAM type 2
macro cystic with a microcytic component lesions consist of multiple small cysts < 1 cm
CCAM type 1
macrocystic one or more large cysts replace normal lung tissue > 2 cm, up to 10 cm
What may also cause pulmonary hypoplasia?
masses within the thoracic cavity
The presence of a pleural effusion may cause a shift in
mediastinal structures, compression of the heart, and inversion of the diaphragm
The central portion of the thorax is occupied by the
mediastinum
CCAM type 3
microcystic malformations are characterized as bulky, large, non cystic lesions appearing as echo-dense masses of the entire lung lobe
Congenital lobar emphysema may appear identical to
microcystic CCAM- presenting as large solid mass
Most of the heart is positioned in the
midline and left chest
Prognosis of pleural effusion
mortality rate: 50% prognosis is poor with associated hydrops
What part of the diaphragm forms last?
most posterior aspect
What is the most commonly defective part of diaphragm?
most posterior aspect, derived from body wall
Congenital cystic adenomatoid malformation (CCAM)
multi cystic mass within the lung consisting of primitive lung tissue and abnormal bronchial and bronchiolar-like structures
This extra lung tissue is
nonfunctional
Pulmonary hypoplasia commonly occurs after prolonged
oligohydramnios or secondary to a small thoracic cavity caused by a structural or chromosomal abnormality
Type 2 and 3 have
poorer prognosis associated polyhydramnios and anasarca have poor prognosis
Compression of lung parenchyma may cause
pulmonary hypoplasia
In the presence of oligohydramnios what may be present?
pulmonary hypoplasia with a reduction in overall thoracic size
What is the major reason why fetuses younger than 24 weeks of gestation are generally considered nonviable?
pulmonary immaturity
Unilateral pulmonary agenesis or hypolasia
rare anomaly often associated with other fetal malformations
Congenital bronchial atresia
rare pulmonary anomaly that results from the focal obliteration of a segment of the bronchial lumen
What forms the lateral margins of the thoracic cavity?
ribs
When fetal hydrothorax is bilateral, it occurs about equally on the
right and left sides
Chylothorax
right-side unilateral collection of fluid secondary to a malformed thoracic duct
Fetal breathing becomes more prominent in the
second and third trimesters
Fetal breathing movements are documented if characteristic ______ movements of the fetal chest or abdomen are sustained for at least 20 seconds
seesaw
What does pulmonary sequestration develop from?
separate outpouching of the foregut or by separation of a segment of the developing lung from from the tracheobronchial tree
Sonographic findings of bronchogenic cysts
small circumscribed masses with no evidence of a mediastinal shift or heart failure AFV is normal
Fetal respiration is decreased by the mother
smoking
The apex of the heart should be directed toward the
spleen
Fetal respiration is stimulated by mothers increased
sugar doses
The lungs lie _____ to the diaphragm
superior
Pulmonary sequestration
supernumerary lobe of the lung, separated from the normal tracheobronchial tree extra pulmonary tissue is present wihin the pleural lung sac (intralobar) or is connected to the inferior border of the lung within its own pleural sac (extra lobar)
Thoracic cavity look
symmetrically bell shaped
Where does the extra lung tissue get its blood supply from?
systemic circulation
What is associated with asphyxiating thoracic dystrophy?
thanatophoric dwarfism
Where does the extra lung tissue get its arterial supply from?
thoracic aorta, with venous drainage into the vena cava
The fluid present in the lungs at birth clears by 3 routes:
through the mouth and nose into the pulmonary capillaries into the lymphatics and the pulmonary vessels
Bronchogenic cysts lack any communication with the
trachea or bronchial tree
At what level in the chest circumference leveled at?
transverse plane at the level of the four chamber view of the heart
Most CCAM lesions are
unilateral and do not favor either lung
Fetal hydrothorax can be
unilateral or bilateral
Congenital lobar emphysema usually occurs in the
upper left or middle lobe and is located within the normal pleural envelope
Where does bronchogenic cysts usually occur?
within the mediastinum or lung