Thursday, 17 December 2015

Expectant Parents Learn About 3D And 4D Diagnostic Ultrasound Solutions In Sugar Land TX

By Mathew John


It was not so long ago that the nearest an expectant mother got to meeting her child before birth was hearing the heartbeat as a stethoscope was held to her belly. Fast forward fifty years and it is a very different story. Expectant parents today can see their baby in moving 4D color real time images as the baby moves around inside its mommy. Sugar Land 3D/4D diagnostic ultrasound provides images that have both aesthetic and medical value.

Fortunately, most of the time these images are nothing more than wonderful keepsakes. However, sometimes they reveal information about the health of the baby that can dramatically affect the unborn baby. Ultrasound was invented as a diagnostic tool, but the images have become so clear that it is sometimes used strictly to get pictures of the baby.

From a medical perspective the images are clear and accurate and provide doctors with valuable information regarding the health of the baby. If a heart defect or some other operable defect is found, sometimes doctors can operate in utero giving the baby the best chance of survival and a good start in life.

For purely aesthetic purposes, new parents get excited and mesmerized by moving 4D images of their baby. The ultrasound images are available in different packages. Parents can get images saved to a CD or DVD and set to music. Or they can purchase paper images in black and white or in color. Parents take the DVD home and show it to friends and family on their TV set. Images can also be emailed.

The CD images are still pictures in color. The DVD has a 4D moving picture of the baby in real time and in color set to music. Every year these images will become more and more meaningful to the parents.

The potential benefits of diagnostic imaging go way beyond creating meaningful keepsakes. Ultrasounds are used to image many parts of the body prior to surgery or as proof that surgery is unnecessary. It was unimaginable fifty years ago to envision the possibilities of something called an ultrasound.




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