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Primary care providers commonly obtain spine ultrasounds for neonates with simple sacral dimples due to perceived concerns about underlying spinal dysraphism, despite a lack of scientific evidence. Nine papers addressing routine spine ultrasounds for children with sacral dimples showed that 3.4% of the 5166 patients had abnormal spine ultrasounds, compared with the 4.8% reported by another study for children without sacral dimples. Most of the abnormal findings in patients with sacral dimples were of no clinical significance. Sacral dimples do not predict underlying spinal cord malformations, and spine ultrasounds should not be performed for neonates with simple sacral dimples. ©2016 Foundation Acta Paediatrica. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Citation

Gregory W Albert. Spine ultrasounds should not be routinely performed for patients with simple sacral dimples. Acta paediatrica (Oslo, Norway : 1992). 2016 Aug;105(8):890-4


PMID: 27059606

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