Guest guest Posted June 14, 2005 Report Share Posted June 14, 2005 In search of various causes for the diseases which his patients bring to him, an ayurvedist can stumble on anything least imagined. We had discussions on this list regarding modern drug caused diseases. Chemicals also have been discussed. Discussion may now move on to technology caused diseases. Modern medical science could impress the patients with technology, and pinpointing the location of abnormality on a photograph by using X-rays, ultrasounds or CT, MRI scans. Nobody thinks of damage on living tissues when undergoing these tests. All are high energy waves or radiations, and in our traditional mind, radiations are tightly linked to nuclear ones. Light, sound, magnetism we take it for granted since everything we have handled since child hood! However, it needs to be noted that before sending an astronaut to Moon, NASA studied the effects of zero gravity and intense electromagnetic radiations on working of the mind of an astronaut. It was found that vision distorts in intense magnetic fields and headache, halunciations can come. Today we are able to communicate across the globe free, due to communication satellites. When a rocket takes these satellites to space, the control of firing is from a room about half a mile away, located deep underground. Deafening noise is the reason. The satellites themselves are tested to go through this acoustic noise (approx. 130 dB) in a special facility, and scientists stay in a control room well insulated. Failures of solar cells by microcracking and delicate optics are frequent during these tests. However, we do not even bat an eyelid when we subject our babies in the womb to similar noise for obtaining sonogram. Ultrasound is being used in medicine practice since 1955. In 1935 it was said that "antenatal work without the routine use of X-rays is no more justifiable than would be the treatment of fractures" [1]. In 1978: "It can be stated without qualification that modern obstetrics and gynecology cannot be practiced without the use of diagnostic ultrasound" [2]. Two years later, it was said that "ultrasound is now no longer a diagnostic test applied to a few pregnancies regarded on clinical grounds as being at risk. It can now be used to screen all pregnancies and should be regarded as an integral part of antenatal care" [3]. On neither of these dates did evidence qualify the speakers to make these assertions. In many countries, the commercial application of ultrasound scanning during pregnancy is widespread, offering "baby look" and "fun ultrasound" in order to "meet your baby" with photographs and home videos. Like many things, the safety of ultrasound depends on the level of exposure. Studies of the lower exposures common in the 1970s and 1980s are fairly reassuring. But since 1993, allowable exposure levels have risen dramatically, and little research has been done on the effects of these higher doses. The extent to which medical practitioners nevertheless followed such scientifically unjustified advice, and the degree to which this technology proliferated, can be illustrated by recent data from three countries. In France, in one year three million ultrasound examinations were done on 700,000 pregnant women-an average of more than four scans per pregnancy. These examinations cost French taxpayers more than all other therapeutic and diagnostic procedures done on these pregnant women. In Australia, where the health service pays for four routine scans, in one recent year billing for obstetrical ultrasound was $60 million in Australian dollars. A 1993 editorial in U.S.A. Today makes the following statement: "Baby's first picture-a $200 sonogram shot in the womb-is a nice addition to any family album. But are sonograms medically worth $1 billion of the nation's scarce health-care dollars? That's the question raised by a United States study released this week. It found the sonograms that doctors routinely perform on healthy pregnant women don't make any difference to the health of their babies." Meanwhile the use of prenatal ultrasound continues to expand in what one consumer advocate calls "the biggest uncontrolled experiment in history." [4] In 2000, approximately 2.7 million women in the United States received prenatal sonograms—some 67 percent of pregnant women [5] Ultrasounds are certainly emotionally very rewarding to have! Thus ectopic pregnancy, miscarriage, multiple pregnancies, fetal abnormalities, dating the pregnancy, estimation of fetal position and weight, placental problems can be decided early so that actions can be planned. However, they are greatly overused in society, raising the costs of healthcare significantly. This is money that could be spent better elsewhere. Therefore, ultrasound overuse is a matter of important public health debate. Kmom [6] urges all pregnant women to thoroughly research any test before deciding whether to use it or not. Do NOT accept blindly what your doctor tells you When ultrasounds provide useful medical information, such as due date or indications of malformations, most doctors consider the risks acceptable. After a medical ultrasound exam, parents typically take home a simple 2D printout showing their fetus, and such pictures have become a virtual ritual of pregnancy in many industrialized countries. After a technology has spread widely in clinical practice, the next step is for health policy makers to accept it as standard care financed by the official health sector. Several European countries now have official policy for one or more routine ultrasound scans during pregnancy. For example, in 1980 the Maternity Care Guidelines in West Germany stated the right of each pregnant woman to be offered at least two ultrasound scans during pregnancy. Austria quickly followed suit, approving two routine scans. Do the scientific data justify such widespread use and great cost of ultrasound scanning? Now, manufacturers are pushing hard to win acceptance for a much more extensive new ritual: a 4D (full motion 3D) movie of the unborn infant, provided by "fetal portrait" studios in shopping malls. These movies are captured on DVD using state-of-the-art ultrasound equipment such as the Voluson 730 made by General Electric. A recent General Electric TV ad bypasses doctors to promote these videos directly to parents, saying, "When you see your baby for the first time on the new GE 4D ultrasound system, it really is a miracle." [7]. General Electric's website provides links to commercial facilities where the new technology is available. With names like "Womb with a View" and "Peek-a-Boo," these businesses advertise heavily in parents' magazines and on the Internet, offering a variety of packages, ranging from a basic 2D ultrasound video ($75) to a deluxe package that includes a 20-minute 4D video set to music and stored on DVD, a set of wallet photographs, and a set of larger photographs suitable for framing ($285). And the videos are in hot demand. Seeing their unborn baby thrills and comforts many parents. Writes British doctor Stuart Campbell, "Both maternal and paternal reaction to the moving 3D image is something we have not previously encountered. I have seen fathers kiss the screen or, more appropriately, their partner's abdomen in an ecstasy of recognition and pleasure."[8] In assessing the effectiveness of ultrasound in pregnancy, it is essential to make the distinction between its selective use for specific indications and its routine use as a screening procedure. Essentially, ultrasound has proven valuable in a handful of specific situations in which the diagnosis "remains uncertain after clinical history has been ascertained and a physical examination has been performed." Yet, considering whether the benefits outweigh the costs of using ultrasound routinely, systematic medical research has not supported routine use. One of the most common justifications given today for routine ultrasound scanning is to detect intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR). Many clinicians insist that ultrasound is the best method for the identification of this condition. In 1986, a professional review of 83 scientific articles on ultrasound showed that "for intrauterine growth retardation detection, ultrasound should be performed only in a high-risk population." In other words, the hands of an experienced midwife or doctor feeling a pregnant woman's abdomen are as accurate as the ultrasound machine for detecting IUGR. The same conclusion was reached by a study in Sweden comparing repeated measurement of the size of the uterus by a midwife with repeated ultrasonic measurements of the head size of the fetus in 581 pregnancies. The report concludes: "Measurements of uterus size are more effective than ultrasonic measurements for the antenatal diagnosis of intrauterine growth retardation." If doctors continue to try to detect IUGR with ultrasound, the result will be high false-positive rates. Studies show that even under ideal conditions, such as do not exist in most settings, it is likely that over half of the time a positive IUGR screening test using ultrasound is returned, the test is false, and the pregnancy is in fact normal. The implications of this are great for producing anxiety in the woman and the likelihood of further unnecessary interventions. There is another problem in screening for IUGR. One of the basic principles of screening is to screen only for conditions for which you can do something. At present, there is no treatment for IUGR, no way to slow up or stop the process of too-slow growth of the fetus and return it to normal. So it is hard to see how screening for IUGR could be expected to improve pregnancy outcome. We are left with the conclusion that, with IUGR, we can only prevent a small amount of it using social interventions (nutrition and substance abuse programs), are very inaccurate at diagnosing it, and have no treatment for it. If this is the present state of the art, there is no justification for clinicians using routine ultrasound during pregnancy for the management of IUGR. Its use should be limited to research on IUGR. That ultrasound during pregnancy cannot be simply assumed to be harmless is suggested by good scientific work in Norway. By following up on children at age eight or nine born of mothers who had taken part in two controlled trials of routine ultrasound in pregnancy, they were able to show that routine ultra-sonography was associated with a symptom of possible neurological problems. With regard to the active scientific pursuit of safety, an editorial in Lancet, a British medical journal, says: "There have been no randomized controlled trials of adequate size to assess whether there are adverse effects on growth and development of children exposed in utero to ultrasound. Indeed, the necessary studies to ascertain safety may never be done, because of lack of interest in such research." The safety issue is made more complicated by the problem of exposure conditions. Clearly, any bio-effects that might occur as a result of ultrasound would depend on the dose of ultrasound received by the fetus or woman. But there are no national or international standards for the output characteristics of ultrasound equipment. The result is the shocking situation described in a commentary in the British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, in which ultrasound machines in use on pregnant women range in output power from extremely high to extremely low, all with equal effect. The commentary reads, "If the machines with the lowest powers have been shown to be diagnostically adequate, how can one possibly justify exposing the patient to a dose 5,000 times greater?" It goes on to urge government guidelines on the output of ultrasound equipment and for legislation making it mandatory for equipment manufacturers to state the output characteristics. As far as is known, this has not yet been done in any country. Safety is also clearly related to the skill of the ultrasound operator. At present, there is no known training or certification for medical users of ultrasound apparatus in any country. In other words, the birth machine has no license test for its drivers. On their websites, providers offer sweeping assurances that using ultrasound to view unborn infants is devoid of any risk. One confidently states, "Extensive studies over 30 years have found that ultrasound has not been shown to cause any harm to mother or baby."[9]. Another says flatly, "There has never been a harmful effect shown by the use of ultrasound. Many women have multiple ultrasounds during pregnancy with no negative effect on the baby."[10] Yet another: "Thousands of studies have been conducted. Nothing has surfaced yet that indicates any harmful effects in the use of ultrasound on animals or on humans."[11] Yet even as business interests strive to reassure their customers, government health officials and professional medical associations issue warnings. In 1999, the American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine (AIUM) released the following statement: The AIUM strongly discourages the non-medical use of ultrasound for psychosocial or entertainment purposes. The use of either two- dimensional (2D) or three-dimensional (3D) ultrasound to only view the fetus, obtain a picture of the fetus, or determine the fetal gender without a medical indication is inappropriate and contrary to responsible medical practice.[12] In February 2004, the American Food and Drug Administration (FDA) issued the following statement: Persons who promote, sell or lease ultrasound equipment for making "keepsake" fetal videos should know that FDA views this as an unapproved use of a medical device. In addition, those who subject individuals to ultrasound exposure using a diagnostic ultrasound device (a prescription device) without a physician's order may be in violation of state or local laws or regulations regarding use of a prescription medical device.[13] Which is right, the statements that fetal ultrasound is perfectly safe or the cautions against it? Why the concern over a technology that has been in everyday use in doctors' offices for decades? In a continuing post tomorrow, we will examine the tissue damage and brain damage issues, as a result of exposure to high power ultrasound. Dr Bhate 1. Reece, L. (1935). The estimation of fetal maturity by a new method of x-ray cephalometry: its bearing on clinical midwifery. Proc Royal Soc Med 18. 2. Hassani, S. (1978). Ultrasound in Gynecology and Obstetrics. New York: Springer Verlag. 3. Campbell, S. & Little, D. (1980). Clinical potential of real-time ultrasound. In M. Bennett & S. Campbell (Eds), Real-time Ultrasound in Obstetrics. Oxford: Blackwell Scientific Publications 4. 1993 statement attributed to UK consumer activist Beverly Beech in Sarah Buckley, "Ultrasound Scans: Cause for Concern," Nexus, Vol. 9, No. 6, Oct.-Nov. 2002. 5. Figures are for the year 2000. Source: National Center of Health Statistics of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, "Live births to mothers with selected obstetric procedures," National Vital Statistics Reports, Vol. 50, No. 5, Feb. 12, 2002, Table 36. 6. .http://www.plus-size-pregnancy.org/Prenatal% 20Testing/prenataltest-ultrasoundsafety.htm#Ultrasound Summary 7. www.gehealthcare.com/usen/ultrasound/4d/commercial.html <http://www.gehealthcare.com/usen/ultrasound/4d/commercial.html> 8. Stuart Campbell, "4D, or not 4D: that is the question," Ultrasound in Obstetrics and Gynecology, Vol. 19, No. 1, Dec. 12, 2002, 1-4. 9. www.firstlooksonogram.com/qa.htm <http://www.firstlooksonogram.com/qa.htm> 10. www.littlesproutimaging.com/faq.htm <http://www.littlesproutimaging.com/faq.htm> 11. www.geddeskeepsake.com/factsheet.html <http://www.geddeskeepsake.com/factsheet.html> 12. www.aium.org <http://www.aium.org> 13. Carol Rados, "FDA cautions against ultrasound `keepsake' images," FDA Consumer, Jan.-Feb., 2004. at www.fda.gov/fdac/features/2004/104_images.html <http://www.fda.gov/fdac/features/2004/104_images.html> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 14, 2005 Report Share Posted June 14, 2005 Dr. Bhate, There is another issue with the "recreational" ultrasound: what happens if parents stumble on some visible, horrible defect in the fetus? I don't think these types of ultrasound are justified, ever. The overuse of medical ultrasound is another issue and another thing driving our healthcare costs up and up. Darla Wells Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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