Patterns of fetal growth in a rural Indian cohort and a comparison with a western European population: data from the Pune Maternal Nutrition Study
Patterns of fetal growth in a rural Indian cohort and a comparison with a western European population: data from the Pune Maternal Nutrition Study
The purpose of this study was to describe fetal size on sonography in a rural Indian population and compare it with those in European and urban Indian populations. Methods. Participants were from the Pune Maternal Nutrition Study of India. Fetal growth curves were constructed from serial ultrasound scans at approximately 18, 30, and 36 weeks’ gestation in 653 singleton pregnancies. Measurements included femur length (FL), abdominal circumference (AC), biparietal diameter (BPD), and occipitofrontal diameter, from which head circumference (HC) was estimated. Measurements were compared with data from a large population-based study in France and a study of urban mothers in Vellore, south India. Results. Fetal AC and BPD were smaller than the French reference at 18 weeks’ gestation (–1.38 and –1.30 SD, respectively), whereas FL and HC were more comparable (–0.77 and –0.59 SD). The deficit remained similar at 36 weeks for AC (–0.97 SD), FL (–0.43 SD), and HC (–0.52 SD) and increased for BPD (–2.3 SD). Sonography at 18 weeks underestimated gestational age compared with the last menstrual period date by a median of –1.4 (interquartile range, –4.6, 1.8) days. The Pune fetuses were smaller, even at the first scan, than the urban Vellore sample. Conclusions. Fetal size was smaller in a rural Indian population than in European and urban Indian populations, even in mid pregnancy. The deficit varied for different fetal measurements; it was greatest for AC and BPD and least for FL and HC
fetal growth, fetal sonography, india, population differences
215-223
Kinare, A.
b04ec339-8732-46df-8ab9-fb3f842c8e68
Chinchwadkar, M.
c45469c7-6ebf-4840-af03-3e9b2ef7368f
Natekar, A.S.
14d084c6-e40d-4343-9512-db4fb7395779
Coyaji, K.J.
7a59d189-baa6-47a1-b1ae-0a0d4a9e5eb6
Wills, A.K.
a49cf0bc-8fe1-4672-8ff2-da46760d2059
Joglekar, C.V.
8cbefe59-fcbe-4e16-99cd-05f18fc60e28
Yajnik, C.S.
ea0648f2-b384-4e5c-9e0f-45cc852e0c75
Fall, C.H.D.
7171a105-34f5-4131-89d7-1aa639893b18
February 2010
Kinare, A.
b04ec339-8732-46df-8ab9-fb3f842c8e68
Chinchwadkar, M.
c45469c7-6ebf-4840-af03-3e9b2ef7368f
Natekar, A.S.
14d084c6-e40d-4343-9512-db4fb7395779
Coyaji, K.J.
7a59d189-baa6-47a1-b1ae-0a0d4a9e5eb6
Wills, A.K.
a49cf0bc-8fe1-4672-8ff2-da46760d2059
Joglekar, C.V.
8cbefe59-fcbe-4e16-99cd-05f18fc60e28
Yajnik, C.S.
ea0648f2-b384-4e5c-9e0f-45cc852e0c75
Fall, C.H.D.
7171a105-34f5-4131-89d7-1aa639893b18
Kinare, A., Chinchwadkar, M., Natekar, A.S., Coyaji, K.J., Wills, A.K., Joglekar, C.V., Yajnik, C.S. and Fall, C.H.D.
(2010)
Patterns of fetal growth in a rural Indian cohort and a comparison with a western European population: data from the Pune Maternal Nutrition Study.
Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine, 29 (2), .
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to describe fetal size on sonography in a rural Indian population and compare it with those in European and urban Indian populations. Methods. Participants were from the Pune Maternal Nutrition Study of India. Fetal growth curves were constructed from serial ultrasound scans at approximately 18, 30, and 36 weeks’ gestation in 653 singleton pregnancies. Measurements included femur length (FL), abdominal circumference (AC), biparietal diameter (BPD), and occipitofrontal diameter, from which head circumference (HC) was estimated. Measurements were compared with data from a large population-based study in France and a study of urban mothers in Vellore, south India. Results. Fetal AC and BPD were smaller than the French reference at 18 weeks’ gestation (–1.38 and –1.30 SD, respectively), whereas FL and HC were more comparable (–0.77 and –0.59 SD). The deficit remained similar at 36 weeks for AC (–0.97 SD), FL (–0.43 SD), and HC (–0.52 SD) and increased for BPD (–2.3 SD). Sonography at 18 weeks underestimated gestational age compared with the last menstrual period date by a median of –1.4 (interquartile range, –4.6, 1.8) days. The Pune fetuses were smaller, even at the first scan, than the urban Vellore sample. Conclusions. Fetal size was smaller in a rural Indian population than in European and urban Indian populations, even in mid pregnancy. The deficit varied for different fetal measurements; it was greatest for AC and BPD and least for FL and HC
This record has no associated files available for download.
More information
Published date: February 2010
Keywords:
fetal growth, fetal sonography, india, population differences
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 149513
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/149513
PURE UUID: 4cb92ebb-4dd8-49bd-a85a-68009e46ebab
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 30 Apr 2010 14:13
Last modified: 11 Dec 2021 02:45
Export record
Contributors
Author:
A. Kinare
Author:
M. Chinchwadkar
Author:
A.S. Natekar
Author:
K.J. Coyaji
Author:
A.K. Wills
Author:
C.V. Joglekar
Author:
C.S. Yajnik
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics