Re: safety of ultrasound in pregnancy

From: Jeanette Burlbaw (prenatalimaging@sbcglobal.net)
Tue Jul 14 08:36:38 2009


My question has also been what each group considers prudent use.  The AIUM has guidelines using pregnant women as models during their meetings.  We have completely incompetent physicians and people out there doing sonography and that isn't public info.  For a patient to ask their physician why they have ancient equipment and can't be sure if it's a girl or boy but feel comfortable in evaluating anatomy won't happen.  The physician still has the power(and do) to train their nurse or medical assistant in their office and set them loose with the equipment.  BUT that's acceptable 'prudent' use in the medical community. 

--
Jeanette Burlbaw BS RDMS FSDMS
Prenatal Imaging Center

--- On Mon, 7/13/09, DuBose, Terry <DuboseTerryJ@uams.edu> wrote:

From: DuBose, Terry <DuboseTerryJ@uams.edu> Subject: Re: safety of ultrasound in pregnancy To: "Multiple recipients of list ULTRASOUND" <ultrasound@mail.obgyn.net> Date: Monday, July 13, 2009, 9:59 PM

repost by bruce in plain readable text...

> From: "DuBose, Terry" <DuboseTerryJ@uams.edu> > To: "'ob-gyn-l@obgyn.net'" <ob-gyn-l@obgyn.net> > CC: "'ultrasound@obgyn.net'" <ultrasound@obgyn.net> > Date: Mon, 13 Jul 2009 10:44:06 -0500 > Subject: Re: safety of ultrasound in pregnancy

I just cannot ignore this one.  I could not find the original message to which Gail Neuman is replying, so I don't know exactly how the question was phrased.  But from Gail's and other's responses the question is about risk of ultrasound to the fetus.  That being the issue, one of the main risks to the fetus, and especially during embryogenesis is from heating.  Ultrasound does heat the tissues, so it depends upon the intensity of the ultrasonic energy, and the time of insonation.

If you are talking about the ultrasound a Chiropractor or Physical Therapist is using to heat tissues, then there is obviously a risk (please see quote below).  However, if you are talking about sonography or ultrasonic imaging (ultrasound is a noun meaning high frequency sound, not an adverb or adjective) at diagnostic intensities, then no real, reproducible effects have been found in the last 30 years.  But that does not mean they will not be found.

The real risk is from folks using ultrasonic energy when they do not have proper education and do not understand the procedure or risks. The best application of ALARA is to have a properly educated sonographer who can get the diagnostic information and end the exam before much insonation has occurred.  A large risk is the uneducated and unwashed looking around, trying to figure out what they are seeing or not seeing.  This is particularly true of the newer sonographic instruments, as mentioned here before, that can apply acoustic energy above the MI 1.0 or TI 1.0 factors, and the operator does not understand these intensity measurements and spends a lot of time with a focused endovaginal transducer very near the embryo.  Embryonic bones start to calcify by 8 LMP weeks, and sonic energy creates more heat in bone.

The greatest risk is the newly pregnant parent(s), excited about their pregnancy, and "Daddy Warbucks" buys them a sonographic instrument (ala Tom Cruise) or even just a Doptone and the parents spend hours (days?) at 4-6 weeks searching for the embryonic heart rate.  I am sure that Gail Neuman would agree that it may not be easy to locate the embryonic heart beat at this early time, even with a real sonographic instrument.  If they can't find the heart beat in two weeks, the anxiety and systemic catecholamines released alone could have a deleterious effect.

The World Federation of Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology's 1992 Symposium on Safety and Standardization in Medical Ultrasound indicated that a rise up to 1.5 degrees Celsius could be used in clinical examination. However, any temperature rise to or above 41 degrees Celsius (105.8O F) should be considered hazardous in embryonic or fetal exposures.  World Federation of Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology, Symposium on Safety and Standardization in Medical Ultrasound: Issues and Recommendations regarding thermal mechanisms for Biological Effects. World Federation of Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology, 1992.

I know this is not news to those here - you already know to tell your patients to stay out of HotTubs.

Just my 2 cents. Peace, Terry

--
Terry J. DuBose, M.S., RDMS, FSDMS, FAIUM
Associate Professor & Director
Diagnostic Medical Sonography Program
University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, CHRP
4301 West Markham St. Mail Slot #563
Little Rock, Arkansas, 72205 USA
501-686-6510 or 501-686-5948
DuBoseTerryJ@UAMS.edu
http://www.uams.edu/chrp/sonography/
http://www.obgyn.net/us/panel/panel.htm
http://www.io.com/~dubose/

-----Original Message----- From: ob-gyn-l@obgyn.net [mailto:ob-gyn-l@obgyn.net] Sent: Saturday, July 11, 2009 8:29 AM To: Multiple recipients of list OB-GYN-L Subject: OB-GYN-L digest 7068

OB-GYN-L Digest 7068

Topics covered in this issue include:

  1) Re: safety of ultrasound in pregnancy             by evsono@pipeline.com (art fougner, md)   2) Re: safety of ultrasound in pregnancy             by DoctorJoe@aol.com   3) Re: safety of ultrasound in pregnancy             by Robert Berg <robert.berg@nyu.edu>   4) Re: safety of ultrasound in pregnancy             by DoctorJoe@aol.com   5) Re: safety of ultrasound in pregnancy             by Robert Berg <robert.berg@nyu.edu>   7) Re: safety of ultrasound in pregnancy             by islesannie@gmail.com (Joanne Bulley, MD) 17) Re: safety of ultrasound in pregnancy             by Dr Eberhard W Lisse <el@lisse.na>

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Date: Fri, 10 Jul 2009 08:35:32 -0500 (CDT) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- From: evsono@pipeline.com (art fougner, md)

--
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Subject: Re: safety of ultrasound in pregnancy

Perhaps we could consult with the Bene Gesserit instead? Or simply use The Force?

Art

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Date: Fri, 10 Jul 2009 09:40:25 EDT ------------------------------ From: DoctorJoe@aol.com ------------------------------ Subject: Re: safety of ultrasound in pregnancy

> > Perhaps we could consult with the Bene Gesserit instead? Or simply use > The Force?

Either way. The former would probably add more spice to the discussion . .

Joe P.

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Date: Fri, 10 Jul 2009 09:45:20 -0400 ------------------------------ From: Robert Berg <robert.berg@nyu.edu> ------------------------------ Subject: Re: safety of ultrasound in pregnancy

Symbiotic???  Don't you mean parasitic?

On Fri, Jul 10, 2009 at 9:28 AM, <DoctorJoe@aol.com> wrote: > > Alright, I'll bite.  I read---safe but new equipment means no long term > studies have been done so don't really know.  I also read--safe if used > prudently by medical professionals. What constitutes prudent use?  U/S done > at every prenatal visit?   As with EFM-has the increased usage of prenatal > U/S scanning improved our infant mortality rate or other measurable > outcomes?  And with the ever present ways physicians are working on > increasing reimbursement are we sure U/S is being used "correctly" and > "prudently" or is it being used to increase income and CYA? > > Sorry, but my philosophy from the MFM standpoint is that U/S is the best > available method of physical examination of the unborn baby. If you consider > that you have TWO patients in obstetrics -- the mother and the baby -- and > don't just feel as I do that there is only one patient -- the mother, who > happens to have a symbiotic organism temporarily living in her uterus -- > then I think U/S is really the only way to do a complete examination of both > of your patients. > > Joe P. > >Robert E. Berg, MD, FACOG, FACS >And this affects me, how?

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Date: Fri, 10 Jul 2009 10:08:17 EDT ------------------------------ From: DoctorJoe@aol.com ------------------------------ Subject: Re: safety of ultrasound in pregnancy

In a message dated 7/10/09 8:47:55 AM, robert.berg@nyu.edu writes: > > Symbiotic???  Don't you mean parasitic? >

Not really.

The mother derives actual benefits from the arrangement.

Some benefits are subtle, like a feeling of well-being at times or heightened attactiveness to the male of the species. Others are more longterm, like protection from various cancers in later life and some sociologic advantages like security (e.g. "I'm gonna use my signing bonus to buy a house for my Momma!").

Joe P.

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Date: Fri, 10 Jul 2009 11:10:20 -0400 ------------------------------ From: Robert Berg <robert.berg@nyu.edu> ------------------------------ Subject: Re: safety of ultrasound in pregnancy

Try telling my mother that.

I think the benefit from protection against say ovarian ca pales in comparison to the number of times I heard "I was worried sick since you went out - do you know how many years you took off my life tonight?"

And, I never got a signing bonus.  I did offer to buy her the house though.  And in typical Jewish mother fashion, she said "No, no. Don't worry about me.  My small apartment is better."

On Fri, Jul 10, 2009 at 10:11 AM, <DoctorJoe@aol.com> wrote: > > In a message dated 7/10/09 8:47:55 AM, robert.berg@nyu.edu writes: > > Symbiotic???  Don't you mean parasitic? > > Not really. > > The mother derives actual benefits from the arrangement. > > Some benefits are subtle, like a feeling of well-being at times or > heightened attactiveness to the male of the species. Others are more long > term, like protection from various cancers in later life and some sociologic > advantages like security (e.g. "I'm gonna use my signing bonus to buy a > house for my Momma!"). > > Joe P.

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Date: Fri, 10 Jul 2009 16:46:31 -0500 (CDT) ------------------------------ From: islesannie@gmail.com (Joanne Bulley, MD) ------------------------------ Subject: Re: safety of ultrasound in pregnancy

I like that salvo!

At times I think there is so much focus on "evidence" that bad evidence is accepted as truth - even when it makes no sense - sometimes gut level / gestalt / "art" of medicine is indeed best.

JB

At Fri, 10 Jul 2009, Bernard Cristalli wrote: > >You know what? >No randomized, double blind study has ever showed that only women get >pregnant naturally. >But nobody needs EBM to know. >B > >GIN11153@aol.com a écrit : >> Louana, >> >> I respectfully disagree. Hundreds of studies have been done, with >> millions of fetuses exposed each year and no problems have been >> correlated to an ultrasound during pregnancy to make sure there are no >> problems: >> >> http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&ie=ISO-8859-1&q=Is+ultrasound+in+pregnancy+safe%3F&aq=f&oq=&aqi >> Gail Neuman RNC BSN CPHW >> Administrator/student midwife >> Orange County Maternity Center >> 1210 S. State College Blvd. >> Suite D >> Anaheim, CA 92806 >>

Joanne Bulley, MD solo gyn Keene, NH

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Date: Sat, 11 Jul 2009 07:57:58 +0100 ------------------------------ From: Dr Eberhard W Lisse <el@lisse.na> ------------------------------ Subject: Re: safety of ultrasound in pregnancy

Nonsense.

BTW, "bad evidence" means, something doesn't fit your narrow view?

el Joanne Bulley, MD wrote: > > At times I think there is so much focus on "evidence" that bad evidence > is accepted as truth - even when it makes no sense - sometimes gut level > / gestalt / "art" of medicine is indeed best.

--
Dr. Eberhard W. Lisse  \        /      Obstetrician & Gynaecologist
el@lisse.NA            / *     | Telephone: +264 81 124 6733 (cell)
PO Box 8421             \     / Please do NOT email to this address
Bachbrecht, Namibia     ;____/      if it is DNS related in ANY way



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