Fit Nation

Health & Fitness

Should Baby Be Scanned?

An ultrasound scan is taken before an amniocentesis procedure is performed.
Mediscan / Corbis
Article Tools

"Doctors make the worst patients," the obstetrician told my wife and me as we waited anxiously for the results of an ultrasound on our second baby, due any day. He was only half joking. All along, I'd been asking him a lot of questions—as I tend to do when I'm nervous—about something called first-trimester prenatal screening. When our first child was born, almost two years earlier, this test for Down syndrome and other birth defects was still brand new. Wary and unsure about its value and accuracy, we decided to pass. This time around, however, we had done our homework, which was slightly frustrating for our doctor.

The first thing we learned was that in the two years since the birth of our first child, the new test had become part of standard medical practice. In fact, on Jan. 2 the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists recommended that all pregnant women get the test regardless of age. This is an important change, mostly because of what it means for amniocentesis.

Amniocentesis, as every mom-to-be of a certain age can tell you, is a medical procedure in which a doctor inserts a long needle through the belly and into the placenta to withdraw amniotic fluid—which is then screened for birth defects. It used to be that once a woman turned 35, she was always counseled about amniocentesis. The cutoff at 35 was, by just about everyone's admission, pretty arbitrary; it was the age at which the risk of Down syndrome seemed to increase. For example, the risk of Down for a 25-year-old woman is about 1 in 1,250. By age 40, that risk has jumped to 1 in 100. What makes the decision so difficult for many parents is that the test carries a slight but real risk of miscarriage.

The new test, by contrast, is noninvasive. It combines two routine blood tests and an ultrasound that measures something called nuchal translucency, a property of the fluid at the back of the baby's neck that tells doctors with better than 90% accuracy whether the baby is at increased risk of Down syndrome. If the test is positive, you still have to decide whether to undergo amniocentesis or another test, chorionic villus sampling, to confirm the diagnosis one way or the other. But if it's negative, you're out of the woods.

Almost. As we were sitting there in the office, we realized we still faced an enormously difficult decision. Whenever you have a medical test, you have to ask yourself, What am I going to do with this new information? Some parents will choose to terminate a pregnancy if a diagnosis of Down is confirmed. Some will start putting dollars into tax-free health-savings accounts to help defray the cost of caring for a child with Down. Others may change the hospital where they plan on having the baby, opting instead for an institution that specializes in high-risk pregnancies. Even parents who would never consider termination may still want to be more emotionally prepared. The hardest part, we are told, is waiting for results, which can take several long days.

So from now on, all pregnant women in the U.S. will be offered a choice of tests. My advice, as a doctor who has wrestled with the decision, is that if you choose the relatively new ultrasound test, you should also choose a hospital where the technicians have been trained to perform it. That can have a big effect on the trustworthiness of the results. As for my wife and me, we opted for the minimalist approach. We don't even know the sex of the child. We are hoping for a boy ... or a girl

View the full list for "Fit Nation"

Slender in the Grass

Parks are for more than play. A new study links green spaces to healthier bodies — and minds

Run for Your Lives

Dust off those sneakers. Data from a long-term study show jogging slows the effects of aging

Just What the Doctor Ordered: A Massage

Sure, massage feels good, but science is revealing its other benefits for both the healthy and the ill

Who Decides if You're Overweight?

When friends and family are battling weight, it's easy to forget what a healthy body looks like

The Snore Wars

That rumbling can put your health, sanity and marriage at risk. Here's what you can do

Dear (Food) Diary

A new study shows that dieters can double their weight loss by jotting down what foods they eat

Fill Up On Flavor

You don't have to binge on fattening foods to feel satisfied. Smart menu selection and clever seasonings can make even the healthiest meals feel like indulgences

Taking On the Thin Ideal

A new study on eating disorders suggests prevention starts with getting girls to realize they've been duped

What's Next for Ted Kennedy

The diagnosis is grim, says Dr. Sanjay Gupta, but some experimental new therapies could extend the senator's life

Keeping Our Daughters Active

Record numbers of girls are playing organized sports. But once they quit, staying fit becomes a struggle

Eat Your Germs

Want to stay healthy? One way may be to get plenty of bacteria in your diet — provided they're the kind found in probiotic foods

Stuck on the Couch

Psst! Exercise is good for you. Knew that already? So do most of us, yet we still do nothing about it. Here's why

Work Out and Drink Up

Alcohol and exercise are not supposed to mix. But together — in the right quantities — they may actually help your heart

Rating Your Doctor

Does your family M.D. deserve a rave review? A pan? The folks from Zagat let you have your say

The Diet-Pill Dilemma

When willpower fails, are antiobesity drugs worth the risk of less-than-pleasant side effects?

When Lite Gets Heavy

Low-fat foods can pack a high-fat wallop if you don't look out for some hidden dangers

The Caffeine Habit

Time was, you got your lift from a cup of joe. Now more and more products come with a kick

What Doctors Don't Say About Obesity

Doctors hate telling you to lose weight as much as you hate hearing it. But their silence can imperil your health

Rethinking Organics

The way your fruits and vegetables are grown makes a big difference, right? Don't be so sure

Two Fixes for Bad Backs

Is surgery or exercise the way to go? The difference depends on the patient — and the pain

Herbal Remedies' Potential Dangers

Taking an herbal supplement can sometimes do more harm than it does good

College Drinking and Heart Problems

Students who drink too much may be setting themselves up for heart problems later on

Knee Deep

Examining how exercise, fatigue and the differences between men and women affect sports injuries

The Heart Of A Woman

The American Heart Association has a brand-new set of guidelines for reducing women's risk of heart disease, heart attacks and strokes

Should Baby Be Scanned?

A doctor — and father-to-be — wrestles with a difficult decision about first-trimester prenatal screening

How to Save Your Heart

An ambitious plan from the creator of the South Beach Diet who believes that a few simple steps can help eradicate heart disease and stroke in the U.S.