Multimedia Gallery
Ultrasound
Ultrasound is one of the most useful procedures for monitoring a baby's prenatal development. With ultrasound, doctors can check for defects of the head, spine, chest, and limbs; diagnose serious conditions like placenta previa or breech birth; and check to see whether the mother will have twins or triplets.
Ultrasound can be used anytime during pregnancy from the fifth week until delivery. It uses inaudible sound waves to "see" the baby inside the uterus. These sound waves bounce off solid structures in the body and are transformed into an image on a screen.
Here's how ultrasound works. Pretend this tennis ball is an organ in the body. This piece of glass represents the ultrasound image. Like this piece of glass, an ultrasound image is actually flat and two-dimensional.
If we could pass this tennis ball through the glass, the ultrasound image would show wherever the two are in contact. Let's watch the same thing on an ultrasound.
The white ring is the reflected image of the outer part of the tennis ball. Like many organs in the body, the tennis ball is solid on the outside, and hollow on the inside. Solid structures, like bones and muscles, reflect sound waves that show up as light gray or white images.
Soft or hollow areas like the chambers of the heart don't reflect sound waves. So they show up as dark or black areas.
In an actual ultrasound of a baby in the uterus, the solid structures in the baby’s body are transmitted back to the monitor as white or gray images. As the baby moves back and forth, the monitor shows the outline of his head. The eyes show as dark spots in the head. The region of the brain and the heart are also shown.
Remember, ultrasound only shows a flat image of the baby. A superimposed illustration of the fetus shows how the fetus actually looks in the uterus.
Ultrasound is still one of the best methods for physicians to visually diagnose major physical defects in the growing baby.
Even though there are no known risks for ultrasound at present, it is highly recommended that pregnant women consult their physician before undergoing this procedure.
Ultrasound
Review Date: 3/31/2024
Reviewed By: LaQuita Martinez, MD, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Emory Johns Creek Hospital, Alpharetta, GA. Also reviewed by David C. Dugdale, MD, Medical Director, Brenda Conaway, Editorial Director, and the A.D.A.M. Editorial team.
Animations
- Breast engorgement
- Cell division
- Cesarean section
- Conception - general
- Conception - pregnancy
- Conception of identical twins
- C-section
- Early labor
- Egg cell production
- Egg production
- Endometriosis
- Fetal ear development
- Formation of twins
- Human face formation
- Infant formulas
- Kids - How big is the baby?
- Kids - How does the baby co...
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- Kids - Where do babies come...
- Newborn jaundice
- NICU consultants and suppor...
- Ovulation
- Placenta delivery
- Placenta formation
- Preeclampsia
- Pregnancy
- Pregnancy care
- Sperm production
- Sperm release pathway
- Storing breast milk
- The role of amniotic fluid
- Twin-to-twin transfusion sy...
- Ultrasound
- Vaginal delivery
Illustrations
- 24-week fetus
- Abnormal discharge from the...
- Abnormal menstrual periods
- Absence of menstruation (am...
- Amniocentesis
- Amniocentesis
- Amniotic fluid
- Amniotic fluid
- Anatomy of a normal placenta
- Antibodies
- Baby burping position
- Bananas and nausea
- Blood cells
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- Breast infection
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- Bulging fontanelles
- Candida - fluorescent stain
- Caput succedaneum
- Cesarean section
- Cesarean section
- Cesarean section
- Childbirth
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- Congenital hip dislocation
- Congenital toxoplasmosis
- Crying - excessive (0 to 6 ...
- Delivery presentations
- Developmental milestones
- Early weeks of pregnancy
- Ectopic pregnancy
- Emergency Childbirth
- Emergency Childbirth
- Endocrine glands
- Endometriosis
- Endometritis
- Erythroblastosis fetalis - ...
- Female breast
- Female reproductive anatomy
- Female reproductive anatomy
- Female reproductive anatomy...
- Female urinary tract
- Fetal blood testing
- Fetal head molding
- Fetus at 10 weeks
- Fetus at 12 weeks
- Fetus at 16 weeks
- Fetus at 26 to 30 weeks
- Fetus at 3.5 weeks
- Fetus at 30 to 32 weeks
- Fetus at 7.5 weeks
- Fetus at 8.5 weeks
- First trimester of pregnancy
- Folic acid
- Folic acid benefits
- Folic acid source
- Follicle development
- Fontanelles
- Foreskin
- Gestational ages
- Gestational diabetes
- Gonadotropins
- Head circumference
- Heat rash
- Height/weight chart
- Hormonal effects in newborns
- Humidifiers and health
- Hysterectomy
- Infant blood sample
- Infant care following delivery
- Infant diaphragmatic hernia
- Infant heat rash
- Infant intestines
- Infant jaundice
- Infantile reflexes
- Influenza vaccines
- Intraductal papilloma
- Intrauterine transfusion
- Jaundiced infant
- Large fontanelles
- Large fontanelles (lateral view)
- Macrosomia
- Male reproductive anatomy
- Male reproductive anatomy
- Male urinary tract
- Mammary gland
- Meconium
- Morning sickness
- Moro reflex
- Newborn head molding
- Newborn test
- Normal female breast anatomy
- Normal uterine anatomy (cut...
- Ovarian cyst
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- Overproductive ovaries
- Pelvic adhesions
- Pelvic laparoscopy
- Placenta
- Placenta
- Placenta
- Placenta previa
- Polyhydramnios
- Preeclampsia
- Pregnancy test
- Primary amenorrhea
- Primary infertility
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- Secondary infection
- Side sectional view of fema...
- Single palmar crease
- Skull of a newborn
- Slit-lamp exam
- Sperm
- Stein-Leventhal syndrome
- Sunken fontanelles (superio...
- Tobacco health risks
- Transvaginal ultrasound
- Ultrasound in pregnancy
- Ultrasound, color - normal ...
- Ultrasound, normal fetus - ...
- Ultrasound, normal fetus - ...
- Ultrasound, normal fetus - ...
- Ultrasound, normal fetus - face
- Ultrasound, normal fetus - ...
- Ultrasound, normal fetus - foot
- Ultrasound, normal fetus - ...
- Ultrasound, normal fetus - ...
- Ultrasound, normal fetus - ...
- Ultrasound, normal fetus - ...
- Ultrasound, normal placenta...
- Ultrasound, normal relaxed ...
- Umbilical cord healing
- Uterus
- Vaginal bleeding during pre...
- Well baby visits
- Yeast infections