Ultrasound Satisfaction in Pregnant Women Clinical Trial
Official title:
How Difficult a Fetal Ultrasound Can be: Time for a Dedicated Classification System
Sonographic imaging stands as the mainstay of fetal anatomical investigation and the primary screening tool for structural abnormalities early in pregnancy. This study aimed to evaluate the occurrence and effect of a cluster of maternal features on sonographic image quality and operator satisfaction.
This was a cross-sectional, single-center observational study of ultrasound scans performed on singleton pregnant women who underwent ultrasound imaging at 11-14 weeks and 19-21 weeks gestation. From March 2023 to March 2024, a convenience cohort of pregnant women who presented for prenatal care at the Fetal Medicine and Prenatal Diagnosis Unit of "Di Venere" Hospital in Bari (Apulia, Southern Italy) and the Obstetrics and Gynecology Unit of Vito Fazzi Hospital in Lecce (Apulia, Southern Italy) to receive routine gestational ultrasound was recruited for the present study. The inclusion criteria were singleton pregnancy and the presence of one or more of the risk factors widely described in the literature as limiting features, i.e., excess weight (BMI>24.9 Kg/m2), retroverted uterus, the presence of myomas, a previous abdominal surgery, and a limited echo absorption. No exclusion criteria related to women's gestational age or ethnicity were applied. ;