Routine Checkups
If you think you might be pregnant, you can use a
home pregnancy test as soon as the first day of your
first missed menstrual period. Pregnancy is measured in weeks from the first
day of your last menstrual period (LMP). There are several ways to
calculate how long you have been pregnant. You can
also use your LMP to
calculate your due date
.
As soon as you know you're pregnant, make an appointment with your
doctor or certified nurse-midwife (CNM). Your first prenatal visit will provide
information that can be used to check for any problems as your pregnancy
progresses.
Good care during pregnancy includes
regularly scheduled prenatal exams. At each prenatal
visit, you'll be weighed, have your abdomen measured, and have your blood
pressure and urine checked. Use this time to discuss your list of pregnancy
concerns or problems with your health professional. At different times in your
pregnancy, you will have additional exams and tests performed. Although some
are routine, others are only done when a problem is suspected or if you have a
risk factor for a problem.
First prenatal visit exams and tests include a health
history, physical examination, and blood and urine tests.
First-trimester exams and tests may include
fetal ultrasound, which uses reflected sound waves to
provide an image of your fetus and placenta. The late first trimester is the
earliest time when you can have the newer, noninvasive
Down syndrome screening using a blood test and an
ultrasound measurement of fetal neck (nuchal fold) thickness. (Nuchal fold
ultrasound is not yet widely available, because only a specially trained
provider can do it.) This is also when you can have genetic testing of your
placenta (chorionic villus sampling, or CVS). A CVS gives you
earlier results than a second-trimester
amniocentesis. Only a highly trained provider can do a
CVS.
Second-trimester exams and tests may include fetal
ultrasound and electronic fetal heart monitoring. In the early second
trimester, you can have the
triple or quadruple screen. This screen measures your
blood levels of:
If you are at risk for genetic problems or your triple or quad
screen says your fetus might have a problem, you may have testing of the fluid
surrounding your baby (amniocentesis). Later on in the second trimester, you
will have an oral glucose screen for possible
gestational diabetes.
If you have
Rh negative blood, you may have an antibody screen and
will receive an injection of Rh immune globulin.
Third-trimester exams and tests may include fetal
ultrasound,
hepatitis B, and group B strep screening.
All pregnant women should be screened for
human
immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection to help prevent newborn HIV
infection.4 Some health professionals may not order
this test unless you request it.
Deciding about birth defect testing
Talk to your doctor or nurse-midwife about screening for birth
defects in your fetus. You can choose from different kinds of tests. If you are
worried about birth defect risk, you might want test results as early as
possible. If your risk for having a baby with a birth defect is very low, you
may decide to have no testing. On the other hand, if knowing early would not
change how you handle the pregnancy in any way, you might decide against
earlier testing, or testing at all. It's your decision.
A screening test uses your blood sample
and/or an ultrasound to look at the chance that your fetus might have a
problem. In some medical centers, you can be screened in the late first
trimester for possible Down syndrome using a nuchal ultrasound and blood tests.
(Only a specially trained provider can do this type of ultrasound, and is not
widely available.) You can be screened in the earlier second trimester for
possible birth defects such as Down syndrome or a
neural tube defect with a blood test called the triple
or quadruple screen. These tests are not risky for you or your fetus.
A diagnostic test detects actual
problems. If your screening results suggest a higher-than-average chance of a
fetal problem, you can then decide whether to have a chorionic villus sampling
or an amniocentesis. Or if you already know you are higher-risk for a birth
defect, because of your age or family history, you might decide not to have the
screening and go straight to diagnostic testing. A key factor for you to know
is that chorionic villus sampling and amniocentesis have slight risks of
miscarriage.
For more information about how your fetus is changing this month,
and about what tests you might think about having, see
Interactive Tool: From Embryo to Baby in 9
Months
.
What to Think About
Timing is an important consideration when deciding which type of
genetic testing to have.
- CVS can be done earlier in pregnancy (usually at 10 to 12
weeks) than amniocentesis (usually at about 16 weeks).5 This allows you to make an earlier decision about whether to
continue or end the pregnancy. Results of CVS may be available more quickly
(within several days) than amniocentesis results (2 weeks).
- CVS doesn't detect neural tube defects, so an
alpha-fetoprotein test, part of the triple screen, is
recommended along with it. Ideally, this is done at 16 to 18 weeks.5
- Both CVS and amniocentesis pose a slight chance of causing a
miscarriage because they disturb the uterus, amniotic
sac, and/or placenta. One recent study showed that the miscarriage risk for
either test was about 1 in 400 when done by a highly trained provider.6 Some studies have shown higher miscarriage risks, between 2
and 4 in 400. 7 This greater risk may be more likely
in medical centers with less experienced providers, especially for CVS. (The
risk of miscarriage with CVS may be smaller when the procedure is done through
the abdomen than when it is done through the cervix.8)
For more information, see the following:
Birth Defects Testing
Should
I have the maternal serum triple or quadruple test (triple or quad
screen)?
Should
I have an early fetal ultrasound?
Should
I have an amniocentesis?
Should I
have chorionic villus sampling?