• Læknablađiđ · Jan 2020

    Case Reports

    [Bilateral pneumothoraces in a pregnant woman following acupuncture - a case report].

    • Hildur Hardardottir.
    • Faculty of Medicine, University of Iceland. Livio, Glæsibær.
    • Laeknabladid. 2020 Jan 1; 106 (1): 19-27.

    AbstractFetal medicine is a subspecialty of obstetrics investigating the development, growth and disease of the human fetus. Often, the mother is part of the definition of the subspecialty where maternal diseases specific to pregnancy are included and therefore named Maternal-Fetal Medicine (MFM). It is appropriate to have one subspecialty for the maternal-fetal unit and the Icelandic subspecialty is named accordingly; "Prenatal diagnosis and maternal diseases". The subspecialty was acknowledged in Iceland in 2015 when physician specialty regulations were changed. The advances in fetal imaging, both ultrasonography and MRI, and molecular diagnostic techniques, together with the possibility of interventions in utero, make fetal medicine an important, rapidly developing field within women's healthcare. A variety of specialists, such as neonatologists, pediatric cardiologists, medical geneticists, radiologists and pediatric surgeons, are necessary to adjunct in the diagnosis and treatment of the fetus as a patient. In larger communities MFM physicians work as consultants besides working on fetal screening, diagnostics and treatment of mothers and their fetuses. In Iceland the subspecialization is less advanced. This article describes common tasks of the fetal medicine physician and examples are given where advances in technology have changed management for instance in aneuploidy screening, Rhesus allo-immunization and fetal interventions. Finally, the establishment of the Nordic Network of Fetal Medicine is described.

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