britgirl82
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Our 12 week scan was this week.
On the ultrasound everything looked great. Baby was measuring a few days big, strong heartbeat, and a normal nuchal measurement. Sonographer didn't check for a nasal bone (something I regret not pushing for now) although she didn't make any comment about it not being there if that makes sense.
I got a call today though and my Down's risk with bloods is 1:90. I realise this is still basically a 99% chance that the baby doesn't have Down's, but I'm confused as to how my bloods and the scan can so obviously disagree: the scan wouldn't have increased my risks, and I'm only 30 so that wouldn't be high-risk either (think the baseline for age 30 is 1:940).
So I'm thinking that the bloods must have been very off to get that result (I don't have the actual figures). I've spoken with someone at the ARC who was awesome and said that it's more than likely natural hormonal variation rather than an indicator of a problem since the scan was good.
Throwing a spanner in the works is the fact that I had chemotherapy last autumn. I've been told definitively that this won't have increased the chances of an abnormality, but I'm wondering whether it could affect hormone markers in my blood: I had my AMH levels tested in March and they were horrendous (basically menopausal), but clearly wrong, since I feel pregnant first month of trying
Anyway - does anyone have any more knowledge about how bloods and NT measurements can 'disagree' or whether chemo could still be messing things up?
We're not going to have an amnio, since we wouldn't terminate, but I'd like to be realistic about the chances of a disabled child so we can prepare ourselves.
Thanks.
On the ultrasound everything looked great. Baby was measuring a few days big, strong heartbeat, and a normal nuchal measurement. Sonographer didn't check for a nasal bone (something I regret not pushing for now) although she didn't make any comment about it not being there if that makes sense.
I got a call today though and my Down's risk with bloods is 1:90. I realise this is still basically a 99% chance that the baby doesn't have Down's, but I'm confused as to how my bloods and the scan can so obviously disagree: the scan wouldn't have increased my risks, and I'm only 30 so that wouldn't be high-risk either (think the baseline for age 30 is 1:940).
So I'm thinking that the bloods must have been very off to get that result (I don't have the actual figures). I've spoken with someone at the ARC who was awesome and said that it's more than likely natural hormonal variation rather than an indicator of a problem since the scan was good.
Throwing a spanner in the works is the fact that I had chemotherapy last autumn. I've been told definitively that this won't have increased the chances of an abnormality, but I'm wondering whether it could affect hormone markers in my blood: I had my AMH levels tested in March and they were horrendous (basically menopausal), but clearly wrong, since I feel pregnant first month of trying

Anyway - does anyone have any more knowledge about how bloods and NT measurements can 'disagree' or whether chemo could still be messing things up?
We're not going to have an amnio, since we wouldn't terminate, but I'd like to be realistic about the chances of a disabled child so we can prepare ourselves.
Thanks.