Title: Assessment of Fetal Lung Maturity
1Assessment of Fetal Lung Maturity
- Dr. Ashraf Fawzy Nabhan
- Assistant Professor of Obstetrics Gynecology
- Ain Shams University, Cairo, Egypt
2Vision Statement
- An obstetric practice where the unnecessary
tragedy of iatrogenic prematurity no longer exists
3Objective
- This presentation reviews those techniques that
enable the obstetrician to predict accurately the
risks of respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) for
the infant requiring premature delivery and to
avoid the unnecessary tragedy of iatrogenic
prematurity
4How Did We Get Here?
- Prior to the now common practice of using
ultrasound to establish gestational age and
amniotic fluid studies to assess fetal pulmonary
maturation, iatrogenic prematurity was an
important clinical problem. - Untimely or unwarranted intervention was
responsible for 15 percent of cases of RDS.
5Todays Situation
- Modern Obstetric practice has shown a decline in
iatrogenic prematurity and RDS. - Several changes in clinical practice appear to
have decreased the incidence of RDS due to
iatrogenic prematurity - The corner stone of those changes appear to be
the increased availability of ultrasound and
fetal lung maturity studies and advances in the
application and interpretation of these
diagnostic procedures
6Available Options
- Quantitation of Pulmonary Surfactant
- Measurement of Surfactant Function
- Evaluation of Amniotic Fluid Turbidity
- Appropriate use of Ultrasonography
7Quantitation of Pulmonary Surfactant L/S Ratio
- It is the most valuable assay for the assessment
of fetal pulmonary maturity. - At 32 weeks the L/S ratio reaches 1. Lecithin
then rises rapidly, and an L/S ratio of 2.0 is
observed at 35 weeks. - A ratio of 2.0 or greater has repeatedly been
associated with pulmonary maturity.
8Quantitation of Pulmonary Surfactant L/S Ratio
- A mature L/S ratio predicted the absence of RDS
in 98 percent of neonates. With a ratio of 1.5 to
1.9, approximately 50 percent of infants will
develop RDS. Below 1.5, the risk of subsequent
RDS increases to 73 percent. - Thus, the L/S ratio, like most indices of fetal
pulmonary maturation, rarely errs when predicting
fetal pulmonary maturity, but is frequently
incorrect when predicting subsequent RDS. Many
neonates with an immature L/S ratio will not
develop RDS.
9Quantitation of Pulmonary Surfactant Test for PG
- A rapid immunologic semiquantitative
agglutination test (Amniostat-FLM) can be used to
determine the presence of PG. - It can detect PG at a concentration gt0.5 µg/ml.
It takes 20 to 30 minutes to perform and requires
only 1.5 ml of amniotic fluid. - It is highly sensitive.
- A positive Amniostat-FLM correlates well with the
presence of PG by thin-layer chromatography and
the absence of subsequent RDS. - It can be applied to samples contaminated by
blood and meconium.
10Quantitation of Pulmonary Surfactant
Microviscosimeter
- The relative lipid content of amniotic fluid may
be evaluated by fluorescence depolarization
analysis. - It is an expensive test.
11Quantitation of Pulmonary Surfactant TDx Test
- The TDx analyzer is an automated fluorescence
polarimeter to determine surfactant albumin ratio
- The test requires 1 ml of amniotic fluid and can
be run in less than 1 hour. - The surfactant albumin ratio (SAR) is determined
with amniotic fluid albumin used as an internal
reference. - A ratio of 50 to 70 mg surfactant per gram of
albumin is considered mature. - The TDx test correlates well with the L/S ratio
and has few falsely mature results, making it an
excellent screening test.
12Measurement of Surfactant Function Shake Test
- It evaluates the ability of pulmonary surfactant
to generate a stable foam in the presence of
ethanol. - Ethanol, a nonfoaming competitive surfactant,
eliminates the contributions of protein, bile
salts, and salts of free fatty acids to the
formation of a stable foam. - At an ethanol concentration of 47.5 percent,
stable bubbles that form after shaking are due to
amniotic fluid lecithin. - Positive tests, a complete ring of bubbles at the
meniscus with a 12 dilution of amniotic fluid,
are rarely associated with neonatal RDS. - It is a screening test that gives useful
information if mature.
13Measurement of Surfactant Function Foam
Stability Index
- The test is based on the manual foam stability
index (FSI), a variation of the shake test. - The kit currently available contains test wells
with a predispensed volume of ethanol. The
addition of 0.5-ml amniotic fluid to each test
well in the kit produces final ethanol volumes of
44 to 50 percent. A control well contains
sufficient surfactant in 50 percent ethanol to
produce an example of the stable foam end point. - The amniotic fluidethanol mixture is first
shaken, and the FSI value is read as the highest
value well in which a ring of stable foam
persists.
14Measurement of Surfactant Function Foam
Stability Index
- This test appears to be a reliable predictor of
fetal lung maturity. - Subsequent RDS is very unlikely with an FSI value
of 47 or higher. - The methodology is simple, and the test can be
performed at any time of day by persons who have
had only minimal instruction. - The assay appears to be extremely sensitive, with
a high proportion of immature results being
associated with RDS, as well as moderately
specific, with a high proportion of mature
results predicting the absence of RDS. - Contamination of the amniotic fluid specimen by
blood or meconium invalidates the FSI results.
The FSI can function well as a screening test.
15Measurement of Surfactant Function Tap Test
- It is a rapid semiquantitative measurement of
surfactant function. - In amniotic fluid from the mature fetus, the
bubbles quickly rise from the bottom layer of the
amniotic fluid to the surface and break down,
while in amniotic fluid from an immature fetus
the bubbles are stable or break down slowly. - Note that these end points are opposite those
used in the FSI or shake test. - The cut-off for maturity is five bubbles. If no
more than five bubbles persist in the ether
layer, the test is considered mature. The test is
read at 2, 5, and 10 minutes.
16Measurement of Surfactant Function Tap Test
- Fluid obtained from both amniocentesis or a
freely flowing vaginal pool may be used. - Amniotic fluid contaminated by blood, meconium,
or vaginal mucus should be centrifuged before the
assay is performed. - Fluid contaminated by blood or meconium or
obtained from the vaginal pool did not
demonstrate an increased incidence of falsely
mature tests. - The tap test may be a valuable screening test,
particularly if a phospholipid profile is not
available.
17Evaluation of Amniotic Fluid Turbidity Visual
Inspection
- During the first and second trimesters, amniotic
fluid is yellow and clear. It becomes colorless
in the third trimester. By 33 to 34 weeks'
gestation, cloudiness and flocculation are noted,
and, as term approaches, vernix appears. - Amniotic fluid with obvious vernix or fluid so
turbid will usually have a mature L/S ratio.
18Evaluation of Amniotic Fluid Turbidity Optical
Density
- This method is thought to evaluate the turbidity
changes in amniotic fluid that are dependent on
the total amniotic fluid phospholipid
concentration. - An OD of 0.15 or greater at wavelength at 650 nm
correlates extremely well with a mature L/S ratio
and the absence of RDS. - Contamination with blood or meconium invalidates
the results.
19Evaluation of Amniotic Fluid Turbidity Lamellar
Body Counts
- Lamellar bodies are the storage form of
surfactant. The test requires lt1 ml of amniotic
fluid and takes 15 minutes to perform. - A lamellar body count gt30,000/µl is highly
predictive of pulmonary maturity, while a count
lt10,000/µl suggests a risk for RDS. - Neither meconium nor lysed blood has an effect on
the lamellar body count.
20Appropriate use of ultrasound
- Grade 3 placenta in an uncomplicated pregnancy at
term suggests fetal pulmonary maturation. This
approach is not reliable in pregnancies
complicated by hypertension, DM, IUGR, and Rh
isoimmunization - BPD of at least 9.2 cm will reliably predict the
absence of RDS in uncomplicated pregnancies. This
approach should not be used for patients with DM. - The most appropriate use of ultrasound in
predicting fetal lung maturity is early
documentation of gestational age so that elective
delivery later in pregnancy can be safely
undertaken.
21Recommendation
- An accurate assessment of gestational age and
fetal maturity is essential - before an elective induction of labor or cesarean
delivery - before the delivery of a patient whose fetus may
not have matured normally such as a
growth-restricted fetus or the fetus of a poorly
controlled diabetic mother.