Prenatal ultrasound identi®ed Dandy±Walker malformation (DWM) in ten singleton pregnancies with concurrent central nervous system (CNS) anomalies and extra-CNS anomalies in eight cases. DWM was con®rmed by postnatal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) or pathological examination in nine cases. Karyotyp
The sonographic diagnosis of Dandy–Walker and Dandy–Walker variant: associated findings and outcomes
✍ Scribed by Jeffrey L. Ecker; Thomas D. Shipp; Bryann Bromley; Beryl Benacerraf
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 120 KB
- Volume
- 20
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0197-3851
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Outcomes of pregnancies with sonographically diagnosed Dandy±Walker (DW) or Dandy±Walker variant (DWV) syndromes vary widely. We examined our own experience with these diagnoses in an effort to identify those sonographic features that best predicted neonatal outcome. We identi®ed 50 fetuses with DW and 49 with DWV diagnosed sonographically. Eighty-six per cent of fetuses with DW and 85% of fetuses with DWV had other sonographically identi®able anomalies, the most common being ventriculomegaly (DW: 32%; DWV: 27%) and cardiac defects (DW : 38%; DWV: 41%). Forty-six per cent and 36% of available karyotypes in cases of DW and DWV, respectively, were abnormal. 50 out of 99 women in our series elected pregnancy termination. Only three pregnancies with DW resulted in a living infant, and only one of these had a normal paediatric examination at six-week follow-up. Thirteen out of 49 infants with DWV survived the neonatal period and 7 of 13 were reported initially as normal infants, including six with an isolated ®nding of DWV. We conclude that overall, the prognosis for these posterior fossa defects is grim but not uniformly fatal. The presence of other anomalies is associated with the worst prognosis. Isolated Dandy±Walker variant has the highest chance of leading to a normal neonate.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
W e describe an infant with a deletion of 8q21+22 who had distinct clinical manifestations including minor facial anomalies, a congenital heart defect, a Dandy-Walker variant, and mild to moderate developmental delay. Her facial characteristics included small, wide-spaced eyes, asymmetric bilateral