Neonatal Lung Lesions with Dr. Steven Rothenberg podcast cover art
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Neonatal Lung Lesions with Dr. Steven Rothenberg

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Topic overview

Dr. Steven Rothenberg discusses prenatal evaluation and management of congenital lung lesions, emphasizing serial ultrasound monitoring for cyst size, mediastinal shift, and potential regression. He covers delivery planning based on lesion severity and notes that fetal intervention is rarely needed except in cases of significant fetal distress.

Key takeaways

  • Serial prenatal ultrasounds every 2 weeks are preferred over fetal MRI for monitoring congenital lung lesions—MRI rarely changes management.
  • 6-40% of prenatally detected lung lesions regress spontaneously; complete disappearance is possible with continued surveillance.
  • Fetal intervention (thoracentesis or thoracoamniotic shunt) is extremely rare, reserved only for large cysts causing hydrops or severe distress.
  • Delivery location depends on lesion size and mass effect: high-risk cases deliver at tertiary centers; stable lesions can deliver locally.
  • Key ultrasound findings: cyst size, mediastinal shift, and compression of normal lung tissue guide postnatal management planning.

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