Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
103191 | Journal of Forensic Radiology and Imaging | 2015 | 7 Pages |
•We review the current acquisition techniques for perinatal post-mortem skeletal surveys.•We highlight the low diagnostic yield from several studies in the literature.•There is no longer evidence base to support routine perinatal radiography.•We recommend moving to a more efficient selective or targeted approach.
The fetal and perinatal autopsy has incorporated imaging for many years, usually skeletal radiographs, which can be diagnostically useful in the post-mortem setting. In fetal or perinatal post-mortem skeletal surveys (PMSSs or “babygrams”), usually two whole-body radiographs are performed for the assessment of bone biometry, gestation estimation and congenital skeletal abnormalities. We outline the clinical settings and acquisition techniques involved, with particular emphasis on diagnostic yield and costs involved. We briefly discuss the alternative radiology modalities (CT and MRI scan). We conclude that there is no longer a diagnostic or cost-effective base for routine fetal and perinatal radiography and a targeted approach based upon the clinical history may now be more pragmatic.