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Dive into the research topics where Wiku Andonotopo is active.

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Featured researches published by Wiku Andonotopo.


Journal of Perinatal Medicine | 2008

New scoring system for fetal neurobehavior assessed by three- and four-dimensional sonography

Asim Kurjak; Berivoj Mišković; Milan Stanojević; Claudine Amiel-Tison; Badreldeen Ahmed; Guillermo Azumendi; Oliver Vasilj; Wiku Andonotopo; Tanja Turudic; Aida Salihagić-Kadić

Abstract Aim: To produce a new scoring system for fetal neurobehavior based on prenatal assessment by 3D/4D sonography. We identified severely brain damaged infants and those with optimal neurological findings and compared fetal with neonatal findings. Results: The new scoring system was retrospectively applied in a group of 100 low-risk pregnancies. After delivery, postnatal neurological assessment was performed, and all neonates assessed as normal reached a score between 14 and 20, which we assumed to be a score of optimal neurological development. Subsequently, the same scoring system was applied in the group of 120 high-risk pregnancies in which, based on postnatal neurological findings, three subgroups of newborns were found: normal, mildly or moderately abnormal, and abnormal. Normal neonates had a prenatal score between 14 and 20, mildly or moderately abnormal neonates had a prenatal score of 5–13, whereas those infants who were assigned as neurologically abnormal had a prenatal score from 0–5. Conclusion: A new scoring system for the assessment of neurological status for antenatal application is proposed, similar to the neonatal optimality test of Amiel-Tison. This preliminary work may help in detecting fetal brain and neurodevelopmental alterations due to in utero brain impairment.


Journal of Perinatal Medicine | 2007

How useful is 3D and 4D ultrasound in perinatal medicine

Asim Kurjak; Berivoj Mišković; Wiku Andonotopo; Milan Stanojević; Guillermo Azumendi; Hrvoje Vrcic

Abstract Aim: The purpose of this paper is to review and analyze the published literature on the use of three-dimensional (3DUS) and four-dimensional (4DUS) ultrasound in perinatal medicine. Methods: We systematically searched Medline through PubMED (January 2000–January 2006), including EMBASE/Excerpta Medica database as well as the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. The search terms used to identify clinical application of 3DUS and 4DUS studies in perinatal medicine were technical development, special features, and recommendation for fetal imaging, research on 3DUS or 4DUS, and the usage of invasive 3DUS or 4DUS procedures. The reference bibliographies of relevant books were also manually searched for supplementary citations. Inclusion criteria were as follows: (1) studies related to the use of 3DUS or 4DUS in perinatal medicine; (2) full text were available in English; (3) publication format of original scientific articles, case reports, editorials or literature reviews and chapters in the books. Results: Five hundred and seventy-five articles were identified, and among those, 438 were relevant to this review. Conclusions: 3DUS and 4DUS provided additional information for the diagnosis of facial anomalies, evaluation of neural tube defects, and skeletal malformations. Additional research is needed to determine the clinical utility of 3DUS and 4DUS for the diagnosis of congenital heart disease, central nervous system (CNS) anomalies and detection of fetal neurodevelopmental impairment assessed by abnormal behavior in high-risk fetuses.


Journal of Perinatal Medicine | 2006

The assessment of fetal behavior of growth restricted fetuses by 4D sonography

Wiku Andonotopo; Asim Kurjak

Abstract Aim: To find out whether the quantity of fetal facial expression and quality of body movements can be used as an additional diagnostic criterion for prenatal brain impairment in fetuses with growth restriction. Subject and methods: A prospective study was conducted in 50 uncomplicated healthy women as control group with reliably dated pregnancies and 50 pregnant women with a growth restriced fetus as study group in the third trimester of pregnancy. 4D ultrasound observation is specially designed to assess whether functional brain impairment and fetal growth restriction had prenatally occurred by the utilization of several behavioral patterns. Results: The median value of all movement patterns in the normal fetuses differed from fetuses with intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR). Statistical evaluation revealed significant differences in the distribution of the movements between these groups (P<0.05). We noted a tendency that IUGR fetuses have less behavioral activity than normal fetuses in all observed movement patterns. Correlation reached statistical significance between normal and IUGR fetuses in the third trimester in hand to head, hand to face and head retroflexion. Statistically significant differences could be shown in the distribution of the median values of observation over the five qualitative categories of head and hand movements (P<0.05). Conclusions: Recent data on IUGR fetuses obtained by 4D sonography are stimulating and might result in a more effective strategy to assess development before birth. The results of this study may encourage future use of 4D ultrasound for quantitative and qualitative assessment of fetal behavior as possible indicators of the neurological condition in IUGR fetuses.


Journal of Maternal-fetal & Neonatal Medicine | 2005

The antenatal development of fetal behavioral patterns assessed by four-dimensional sonography

Asim Kurjak; Jose Maria Carrera; Marijana Medić; Guillermo Azumendi; Wiku Andonotopo; Milan Stanojević

The investigation of fetal intrauterine activities has been enabled by the development of two-dimensional ultrasound. It has been shown that the earliest signs of fetal motor activity can be in the late embryonic period, and that the characteristics of fetal motor patterns change constantly throughout gestation. During the first trimester of pregnancy, the repertoire and frequency fetal movement patterns constantly expand, whereas the second and third trimesters are characterized by the progressive organization of fetal activities into complex and clearly distinct behavioral patterns. The comparison of real time ultrasonic studies of fetal behavior with the morphological studies of fetal brains has revealed that the appearance of new behavioral patterns or the transition of existing patterns directly reflect the complex neurodevelopment processes. It has been suggested that the assessment of fetal behavioral patterns could give us insight into the integrity of fetal central nervous system and enable the early detection of cerebral dysfunctions. The development of a new ultrasonic technique, four dimensional sonography, could represent a significant improvement in the assessment of fetal behavior. According to the preliminary results, this new technique could open a new perspective for the investigations of fetal behavioral patterns and contribute significantly to our better understanding of complex neurodevelopmental events. The most important neurodevelopmental events, the basic technology of 4D ultrasound and its application in the assessment of functional development of fetal central nervous system will be the subject of this review.


Journal of Perinatal Medicine | 2005

The assessment of fetal behavior in early pregnancy: comparison between 2D and 4D sonographic scanning

Wiku Andonotopo; Marijana Medić; Aida Salihagić-Kadić; Dragan Milenković; Nerea Maiz; E. Scazzocchio

Abstract Aim: To determine the accuracy of 4D sonography in the assessment of embryonic and early fetal motor activity in the first trimester of normal pregnancy, in comparison to the 2D sonography. Methods: Fifty pregnant women between 6–14 weeks of gestation with singleton pregnancy were assigned for the investigation. Two dimensional and four dimensional recordings were displayed on the screen and recorded on the videotape during the 15 minutes observation period. Results: General body, head and limb movements recorded by 2D sonography were notable by 4D technique in the same gestational age. These movements were presented collectively with maximum, minimum, and median frequencies during 15 minutes observation period. Spearman rank order correlation reached statistical significance (P<0.05) between the frequencies of all observed movement patterns assessed by two different techniques. Several movement patterns, such as sideway bending, hiccup, breathing movements, mouth opening and facial movements could be observed only by 2D sonographic technique in this period of gestation. Conclusion: Presently, both 2D and 4D methods are required for the assessment of early fetal motor development and motor behavior. It is reasonable to expect that such technological improvement may provide some new information about the intrauterine motor activity and facilitate the prenatal detection of some neurological disorders.


The Ultrasound Review of Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2004

Assessment of fetal behavior and general movements by four-dimensional sonography

Wiku Andonotopo; Milan Stanojević; Asim Kurjak; Guillermo Azumendi; Jose Maria Carrera

The aim of this paper was to review the clinical applications of four-dimensional ultrasonography in the assessment of fetal behavior. With the use of a computerized database, articles on three-dimensional ultrasonography were reviewed. Several applications of dynamic three-dimensional ultrasonography have been reported, including imaging of fetal movements, facial expression and fetal hand movements. The importance of the assessment of fetal behavior by four-dimensional sonography is stressed. Four-dimensional sonography seems to be a useful imaging tool for clinical problem solving in perinatology, especially in observing the development of the central nervous system in utero.


The Ultrasound Review of Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2005

Fetal yawning assessed by 3D and 4D sonography

Olivier Walusinski; Asim Kurjak; Wiku Andonotopo; Guillermo Azumendi

The capacity of four-dimensional sonography to evaluate complex facial expressions allows recognition of a common behavior, yawning. Although there has been remarkably little interest in yawning in research and medical practice, even though it is an everyday phenomenon, we submit an original interpretation on the basis of knowledge derived from phylogeny and ontogeny. As a flip-flop switch, the reciprocal interactions between sleep- and wake-promoting brain regions allow the emergence of distinct states of arousal. By its ontogenical links with REM sleep, yawning appears as a behavior which procures an arousal reinforcement through the powerful stretch and the neuromuscular rewiring induced. Yawning indicates a harmonious progress in the development of both the brainstem and the peripheral neuromuscular function, testifying to the induction of an ultradian rhythm of vigilance. The lack of fetal yawn, frequently associated with lack of swallowing, associated or not with retrognathia, may be a key to predict a brainstem’s dysfunction after birth.


Journal of Maternal-fetal & Neonatal Medicine | 2005

Behavior of an anencephalic fetus studied by 4D sonography

Wiku Andonotopo; Asim Kurjak; Mirjana Ivancic Kosuta

Diagnosis of anencephaly during early pregnancy by ultrasound which is based on the demonstration of absent cranial vault and cerebral hemispheres, has been known for more than 25 years. Morphological records of abnormal and normal brain structure in anencephalic fetuses have been clearly understood. Nevertheless, there are still unknown facts about fetal behavior affected by anencephaly. Although abnormal motor behavior in anencephalic fetuses has been reported, detailed quantitative and qualitative study of the fetal behavior assessed by direct four-dimensional (4D) ultrasound does not exist. In the present case, we describe a comparison of fetal behavior between a fetus with anencephaly and a normal fetus at 19 weeks of pregnancy.


The Ultrasound Review of Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2004

The role of 4D sonography in the neurological assessment of early human development

Asim Kurjak; Jose Maria Carrera; Milan Stanojević; Wiku Andonotopo; Guillermo Azumendi; E Scazzocchio; Marijana Medić; Aida Salihagić-Kadić

The spectrum of disorders attributable to primary aberrations of the developmental program should increase dramatically in the next decades, in concert with the continuing explosion of neurobiologic insights into normal brain development. Neurological disability is the most feared complication of pregnancy, labor and the neonatal period. The cause and effect relationship is often uncertain. The advent of 4D sonography and its application to study of fetal behavior have begun to provide insight into the structural and functional fetal brain development.


Journal of Perinatal Medicine | 2005

New data about embryonic and fetal neurodevelopment and behavior obtained by 3d and 4d sonography

Aida Salihagić-Kadić; Asim Kurjak; Marijana Medić; Wiku Andonotopo; Guillermo Azumendi

Abstract The development of the human central nervous system (CNS) begins in the early embryonic period and proceeds through a sequence of very complicated processes long after delivery. Although the neurodevelopmental processes are genetically determined, their complexity and intensity implicates the vulnerability of the CNS to number of environmental factors. There is substantial evidence to show that many neurological problems, from minor cerebral dysfunction to the cerebral palsy, originate form the prenatal, rather than perinatal or postnatal periods of life. A variety of neurological and neuropsychiatric diseases is nowadays considered to originate, at least partly, from the prenatal incidents. In most of these conditions, there is no reliable parameter for detection or prediction of cerebral lesions and there is an urgent need to develop strategies that would enable the early detection of cerebral lesions or indications that such lesions might occur. The new, advanced, imaging techniques such as 3-dimensional and 4-dimensional sonography, opened a new perspective for the investigation of structural and functional development of fetal CNS. The application of these techniques might improve our understanding of the prenatal neurodevelopmental events and possibly facilitate the development of diagnostic strategies for early detection or prevention of brain dysfunctions and damage.

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Najah Saleh

Hamad Medical Corporation

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Najat Khenyab

Hamad Medical Corporation

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