ABSTRACT
Fetuses with a single umbilical artery are considered at increased risk for chromosomal
and structural abnormalities, and increased adverse perinatal outcome. A young nulliparous
patient was followed with weekly nonstress testing due to well-controlled gestational
diabetes, a single umbilical artery, and a double nuchal cord. At 31 weeks gestation,
following the occurrence of a severe prolonged variable deceleration of the fetal
heart rate the patient was hospitalized for close fetal surveillance with consideration
that the deceleration may represent recurring intermittent compression of the single
umbilical artery. Continuous fetal monitoring depicted recurrent severe variable decelerations
of the fetal heart rate. Thirty-six hours after admission, prolonged fetal bradycardia
to 60 bpm necessitated emergency cesarean delivery of a nonhypoxic nonacidotic fetus,
which subsequently did well. This case suggests that fetuses with a single umbilical
artery nuchal cord(s) may be at increased risk of significant umbilical cord compression.
KEYWORDS
Prenatal ultrasound - color Doppler imaging - single umbilical artery - nuchal cord
- cord compression - nonreassuring fetal status
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David M ShererM.D.
Division of Maternal-Fetal Medicine, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology
State University of New York, Downstate Medical Center
445 Lenox Road, Box 24
Brooklyn, NY 11203-2098