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The Myelic Limited Dorsal Malformation: Prenatal Ultrasonographic Characteristics of an Intermediate Form of Dysraphism

Saskia Vande Perre, Lucie Guilbaud, Timothée De Saint-Denis, P Maurice, Pauline Lallemant‐Dudek, Émeline Maisonneuve, Ferdinand Dhombres, Éléonore Blondiaux, Hubert Ducou Le Pointe, Michel Zérah, Jean‐Marie Jouannic, Cathérine Garel

2021Fetal Diagnosis and Therapy17 citationsDOI

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The aim of the study was to report a subtype of dysraphism designated as myelic limited dorsal malformation (MyeLDM) and to describe its characteristics at prenatal ultrasound (US). METHODS: It was a retrospective study from 2014 to 2020 based on second-line US evaluation of patients referred to our institution for myelomeningocele (MMC). Magnetic resonance imaging and acetylcholine esterase evaluation in the amniotic fluid were also offered. Major and minor criteria for open and closed dysraphism were defined and recorded for each patient. Patients were included as MyeLDM when both criteria of closed and open dysraphism were observed in the same fetus. Correlations were obtained with the postpartum data. RESULTS: Twenty patients fulfilled the inclusion criteria, some of them being very close to MMC, others very close to limited dorsal myeloschisis (LDM), and others lying in between. There were 13 live-born neonates and 7 terminations of pregnancy. Correlations between prenatal and postpartum data were overall very good. CONCLUSION: Our series describe the ultrasonographic characteristics of an intermediate type of dysraphism and suggest that there is a continuum between MMC and LDM with numerous possibilities of hybrid forms (MyeLDM) sharing characteristics of both open and closed dysraphisms.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineSpinal dysraphismUltrasoundMagnetic resonance imagingPregnancyPrenatal diagnosisSurgeryDorsumFetusObstetricsSpina bifidaPediatricsRadiologyAnatomyBiologyGeneticsSpinal Dysraphism and MalformationsCongenital gastrointestinal and neural anomaliesScoliosis diagnosis and treatment