Amniocentesis is a procedure that involves the removal of amniotic fluid from the uterus. Amniotic fluid is the fluid that surrounds and protects a foetus during pregnancy. This fluid contains foetal cells and proteins.
Although amniocentesis can provide essential information about a baby’s health, it carries its set of dangers, and one should be prepared for the outcomes. Let us discuss what amniocentesis is and what is the test used for.
What is an amniocentesis test for, and how does it work?
In short, amniocentesis is a process that involves extracting a small sample of amniotic fluid for testing. This is the fluid that surrounds a pregnant woman’s foetus. Amniotic fluid is a transparent, pale-yellow liquid that does the following:
- Prevents harm to the foetus
- Guards against infection
- Enables the infant to move around and develop normally
- Assists in maintaining the foetus’s temperature
The amniotic fluid is made up of cells that have been shed by the foetus. These cells include genetic data that can be utilised to diagnose genetic abnormalities and ONTDs. Based on the family history, testing for inherited abnormalities and metabolic disturbances may be performed.
Reasons for performing the amniocentesis
Amniocentesis is performed for a variety of reasons:
- Genetic Testing: During genetic amniocentesis, a sample of the amniotic fluid is taken and tested for certain diseases, such as Down syndrome.
- Testing of the foetal lungs: Collecting a sample of amniotic fluid and analysing it to see if a baby’s lungs are mature enough for birth is known as foetal lung maturity screening.
- Foetal infection is diagnosed: Amniocentesis is sometimes done to check for infection or another sickness in a baby. The method can also be used to assess the severity of anaemia in babies with Rh sensitisation, a rare illness in which the mother’s immune system develops antibodies against a protein on the surface of the baby’s blood cells.
- Treatment: If a pregnant mother has too much amniotic fluid in her uterus during pregnancy, amniocentesis can be done to drain it from her uterus (polyhydramnios).
- Testing for paternity. Amniocentesis is a procedure that collects DNA from the foetus and compares it to DNA from the putative father.
How is an amniocentesis test helpful?
The probability of having a child with Down syndrome rises dramatically as a woman gets older, from roughly one in 2,000 (at age 20) to one in 100 (at 40 years).
Among the pregnant women who may benefit from amniocentesis are:
- Women in their forties and fifties (Victorian women aged 37 years and over are routinely offered this test)
- Women having a history of chromosomal abnormalities in their family, such as Down syndrome
- Women who have already had chromosomal problems in their children
- Women who have been identified as carriers of genetic diseases
- Women with partners who have a family history of chromosomal abnormalities or genetic disorders
- Women who have a result from a serum screen blood test or an abnormal ultrasound scan
When is an amniocentesis done?
- Leaking amniotic fluid. Rarely, amniotic fluid leaks through the vagina after amniocentesis. However, in most cases, the amount of fluid lost is small and stops within one week, and the pregnancy is likely to continue normally.
- Miscarriage. Second-trimester amniocentesis carries a slight risk of miscarriage — about 0.1 to 0.3 per cent. Research suggests that the risk of pregnancy loss is higher for amniocentesis done before 15 weeks of pregnancy.
- Needle injury. During amniocentesis, the baby might move an arm or leg into the path of the needle. Serious needle injuries are rare, however.
- Rh sensitization. Rarely, amniocentesis might cause the baby’s blood cells to enter the mother’s bloodstream. If you have Rh-negative blood and you haven’t developed antibodies to Rh-positive blood, you’ll be given an injection of a blood product called Rh immune globulin after amniocentesis. This will prevent your body from producing Rh antibodies that can cross the placenta and damage your baby’s red blood cells. A blood test can detect if you’ve begun to produce antibodies.
- Infection. Very rarely, amniocentesis might trigger a uterine infection.
- Infection transmission. If you have an infection — such as hepatitis C, toxoplasmosis or HIV/AIDS — the infection might be transferred to your baby during amniocentesis.
Conclusion
A prenatal test called amniocentesis can detect genetic abnormalities and other health problems during pregnancy. This article described amniocentesis with a test. Amniocentesis is a prenatal technique that involves withdrawing a tiny volume of amniotic fluid from the sac around the foetus from a pregnant woman. The purpose of amniocentesis is to study a small sample of this fluid to gain information about the baby, including its sex, as well as to discover physical problems like Down syndrome or spina bifida. Amniocentesis is only conducted on women who are suspected of having a higher chance of giving birth to a child with a birth defect.