Obstetric & Fetal Ultrasound Abbreviations serve a variety of clinical and practical purposes in prenatal care, diagnosis, documentation, and communication. Here's how they are commonly used:
1– Rapid Documentation
2– Standardization in Reporting
3– Efficient Communication Among Professionals
4– Diagnostic Interpretation
5– Risk Assessment & Monitoring
6– Educational & Training Use
7– Space-Saving in Charts & Forms
8– Alerts & Flags in Monitoring
Abbreviations like BPD, HC, AC, and FL allow clinicians to quickly document measurements in fetal biometry charts or reports without writing full terms repeatedly.
Using standardized terms such as EFW, EDD, or AFI ensures consistency across:
- Electronic medical records (EMRs)
- Radiology and obstetric ultrasound reports
- International guidelines and protocols
Abbreviations like IUGR, NTD, or TTTS provide shorthand for complex diagnoses or conditions, allowing obstetricians, sonographers, radiologists, and neonatologists to communicate clearly and concisely.
Many abbreviations reflect key diagnostic parameters:
- PI, RI, S/D Ratio for Doppler studies
- CPR (Cerebroplacental Ratio) for fetal oxygenation and wellbeing
- CI (Cephalic Index) for skull shape assessment
Abbreviations like:
- NT, CPC, EIF are used in first-trimester screening
- HLHS, DWS, TOF are vital in anomaly scan documentation
- SIUGR, AFI, OLI are essential in third-trimester fetal wellbeing checks
They help teach and test fetal development topics and pathology in:
- Sonography and radiology training programs
- OB/GYN board exams
- Clinical protocols and checklists
Ultrasound worksheets, growth charts, and PACS reports often use abbreviations due to space constraints,
- EDD by US: 08/22/25 (based on CRL)"
- "EFW: 2400g (BPD, HC, AC, FL used)"
Electronic systems can flag issues based on entries:
- EFW <10th %tile + CPR <1.08 → Risk of fetal hypoxia
- MVP <2 cm → Alert for Oligohydramnios
GS– Gestational Sac
YS– Yolk Sac
CRL– Crown-Rump Length
MSD– Mean Sac Diameter
FHR– Fetal Heart Rate
B-hCG– Beta Human Chorionic Gonadotropin
NT– Nuchal Translucency
NB or NBL– Nasal Bone (Length)
DV– Ductus Venosus (for early screening)
TR– Tricuspid Regurgitation (first trimester screening)
CF– Cord Insertion (Cord Factor)
TVS– Transvaginal Sonography
CL– Cervical Length
SA– Spontaneous Abortion
TA– Threatened Abortion
BO– Blighted Ovum
EP– Ectopic Pregnancy
BPD– Biparietal Diameter
HC– Head Circumference
AC– Abdominal Circumference
FL– Femur Length
HL– Humerus Length
TCD– Transcerebellar Diameter
OFD– Occipitofrontal Diameter
CI– Cephalic Index (BPD/OFD × 100)
EFW– Estimated Fetal Weight
SDR– Standard Deviation Range
EDD by US– Estimated Due Date by Ultrasound
CS– Composite Score (used in biometric averaging)
Ponderal Index– EFW / Length³ (fetal growth evaluation)
UA PI– Umbilical Artery Pulsatility Index
MCA PI– Middle Cerebral Artery PI
CPR– Cerebroplacental Ratio (MCA PI / UA PI)
DV PI– Ductus Venosus PI
S/D– Systolic to Diastolic Ratio
RI– Resistive Index
TAMX– Time-Averaged Maximum Velocity
AFI– Amniotic Fluid Index
MVP– Maximum Vertical Pocket
OLI– Oligohydramnios
POLY– Polyhydramnios
NTD– Neural Tube Defect
DWS– Dandy-Walker Syndrome
ACC– Agenesis of Corpus Callosum
VSD– Ventricular Septal Defect
AVSD– Atrioventricular Septal Defect
HLHS– Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome
CDH– Congenital Diaphragmatic Hernia
TOF– Tetralogy of Fallot
EUA– Exomphalos / Umbilical Hernia / Abdominal Wall Defects
DUV– Dilated Ureter and Vesicoureteral Reflux
PUV– Posterior Urethral Valves
ARPKD– Autosomal Recessive Polycystic Kidney Disease
MC– Multicystic Dysplastic Kidney
SB– Spina Bifida
CNS– Central Nervous System
CPC– Choroid Plexus Cyst
NBL– Nasal Bone Length
EIF– Echogenic Intracardiac Focus
EFB– Echogenic Fetal Bowel
LCC– Longitudinal Cranial-Caudal View
TC– Thoracic Circumference
ASD– Atrial Septal Defect
DCDA– Dichorionic Diamniotic
MCDA– Monochorionic Diamniotic
MCMA– Monochorionic Monoamniotic
TTTS– Twin-to-Twin Transfusion Syndrome
TAPS– Twin Anemia-Polycythemia Sequence
TRAP– Twin Reversed Arterial Perfusion
SIUGR– Selective Intrauterine Growth Restriction
ANI– Amniotic Fluid Imbalance
MOD– Mode of Delivery
BMI– Body Mass Index
PIH– Pregnancy Induced Hypertension
PE– Preeclampsia
GDM– Gestational Diabetes Mellitus
PROM– Premature Rupture of Membranes
PPROM– Preterm PROM
PL– Placenta Low-lying
PP– Placenta Previa
PA– Placental Abruption
PI– Placental Insertion
IUGR– Intrauterine Growth Restriction
IUFD– Intrauterine Fetal Demise
CS– Cesarean Section (also known as C/S)
VBAC– Vaginal Birth After Cesarean
Cx– Cervix
IC– Incompetent Cervix
CL– Cervical Length
2D– Two-Dimensional Imaging
3D– Three-Dimensional
4D– Real-time 3D (4D = 3D + motion)
M-Mode– Motion Mode (for heart rate)
PW– Pulsed Wave Doppler
CW– Continuous Wave Doppler
CFM– Color Flow Mapping
B-mode– Brightness Mode
A-mode– Amplitude Mode
TAS– Transabdominal Sonography
TVS– Transvaginal Sonography
Calculate LMP from Gestational Age
What is the Last Menstrual
Period (LMP)?
The LMP is the first day
of a woman's last menstrual period before she became pregnant. It's
commonly used as a reference point to estimate the due date and track
the progress of pregnancy.
What is Gestational Age (GA)?
Gestational Age refers to
how far along a pregnancy is, measured in weeks and days from the LMP,
not from the date of conception. For example, if a pregnancy is said to be 10
weeks and 4 days, it means it has been 10 weeks and 4 days since the LMP.
Why Calculate LMP from GA?
Sometimes, you know the gestational
age (from an ultrasound, for example) but not the LMP. In such cases, you
can work backward from today's date to find the estimated LMP.
ЁЯУЕ How to Calculate LMP
from GA:
Step 1: Convert Gestational Age
to Days
- Multiply the number of weeks by 7.
- Add the remaining days.
- Example: 12 weeks and 5 days → 12×7+5=8912 \times 7
+ 5 = 8912×7+5=89 days.
Step 2: Subtract the Total Days
from Today's Date
- Use a calendar or date calculator.
- Example: If today is April 9, 2025 and GA is 12
weeks and 5 days →
April 9, 2025 − 89 days = January 10, 2025
This result (January 10, 2025) is
the estimated LMP.
ЁЯУЭ Summary Formula:
LMP = Today's Date - Gestational
Age (in days)
Note: If you select English, answer all questions in English.
рдпрджि рдЖрдк рд╣िंрджी рдЪुрдирддे рд╣ैं, рддो рд╕рднी рдк्рд░рд╢्рди рд╣िंрджी рдоें рд╣рд▓ рдХрд░ें।
Result / рдкрд░िрдгाрдо:
ReplyDeleteQ1: Correct Answer
Q2: Correct Answer
Q3: Correct Answer
Q4: Correct Answer
Q5: Correct Answer
Q6: Correct Answer
Q7: Correct Answer
Q8: Correct Answer
Q9: Correct Answer
Q10: Correct Answer
Your score: 10/10 (100%)
рдЖрдкрдХा рд╕्рдХोрд░: 10/10 (100%)
Result / рдкрд░िрдгाрдо:
DeleteQ1: Incorrect. Correct answer is C
Q2: Correct Answer
Q3: Incorrect. Correct answer is A
Q4: Correct Answer
Q5: Incorrect. Correct answer is A
Q6: Incorrect. Correct answer is A
Q7: Incorrect. Correct answer is C
Q8: Incorrect. Correct answer is A
Q9: Incorrect. Correct answer is C
Q10: Correct Answer
Your score: 3/10 (30%)
рдЖрдкрдХा рд╕्рдХोрд░: 3/10 (30%)