Archive for category 3D ultrasound

3D Ultrasound Checklist

3D Ultrasound Checklist

  • Fetus
  • Friends
  • Family
  • Toys and books for other kids
  • CD of music you want playing in the background of your DVD (optional)
  • Cell phone (to call friends and family immediately when finding out if it’s a boy or girl)
  • Kleenex (in case you or Dad get emotional)

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Worst gifts for pregnant women

These are the gifts you want to avoid giving your pregnant loved one this Christmas, Hannukah, Kwanzaa, or winter solstice. 

In the last article, I mentioned some excellent gifts for pregnant women, including a gift certificate for a 3D ultrasound and a pregnancy massage.  Here, in this article, are the worst gifts you can give to someone who is pregnant and why these gifts are so horrible.

  • Breast pump

Unless you know her very well and you know for a fact that she is planning on breastfeeding and pumping, this gift can be in poor taste.  Also, if she is not planning on breastfeeding, this gift can be considered overbearing or offensive if she feels like you are pressuring her to breastfeed.

What can be given instead:  A luxury baby bottle set, which can be used for storing pumped breastmilk or used for bottlefeeding, and is one step removed from the actual secretion of bodily fluids.

  • Gomco circumcision clamp

In addition to requiring a physician license to purchase and use this equipment, a circumcision clamp will not be an appropriate gift for a pregnant woman unless you know that 1) she is having a boy and 2) she plans on having her baby boy circumcised and 3) you know that she is planning on performing the circumcision herself.  Unless she is a pediatrician or ob/gyn physician (or in some cases, a family practice physician), she is probably not qualified to perform her own baby’s circumcision.  Plus, if she is not religiously or culturally inclined towards circumcision, she may object to such a gift and may believe that you are subtly encouraging her towards having her baby boy get a circumcision.

What can be given instead:  A diaper cake makes a great gift regardless of whether your pregnant loved one is having a boy or a girl.  And if she is having a boy, whether her baby boy will be circumcised or not, he will still have to pee.  And for that, he will need diapers.  A diaper cake makes an excellent gift for a baby shower or for the holidays for your pregnant wife or girlfriend, and no blood will have to be lost with this gift.

  • Explicit pregnancy sex book

This is probably not the best gift to get her if you don’t know the pregnant woman really well.  For example, if she is your employee, a friend of a friend, your postal carrier, your dentist, or your next-door neighbor.  This can be considered in poor taste, at best, and sexual harrassment, at worst.  Such books have titles such as, How to Have Orgasms During Pregnancy, and Your Orgasmic Pregnancy: Little Sex Secrets Every Hot Mama Should Know.

Unless you are giving this gift to a girlfriend, wife, partner, or significant other, you may be better off sticking with a safer alternative.

What can be given instead: What to Expect When You’re Expecting, now in its third edition, is still the best selling book among pregnant women.  Other great books for pregnant women are books of baby names and books showing the pregnancy week by week.

If you know nothing about pregnancy, before you give a gift to a pregnant woman, you should find out which things are not generally allowed to be consumed during pregnancy.  The big ones are cigarettes, alcohol, coffee, and sushi.  Also, exotic fish and tuna in large quantities can also be harmful.  Belly creams and other cosmetics should be looked at to make sure they don’t contain vitamin A.  Giving a gift that could harm her fetus would be a major faux pas.

What can be given instead:  Instead of sushi, a gift certificate for ice cream will always be appreciated.  Instead of alcohol and coffee, there are non-alcoholic beverages that are specially designed for pregnant women, such as Preggatinis.  Here is a unique list of non-alcoholic beverages written by pregnant women themselves.

However, a gift certificate or gift card for sushi at Kamehachi or coffee at Starbucks can actually work very well for some pregnant women who can’t wait to splurge on sushi or coffee as soon as their baby is born.

What is the worst gift you received during your pregnancy?  Anything that was in very bad taste or even offensive? We would love to hear from you.

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Perfect Christmas gift for pregnant wife or girlfriend

What makes the perfect Christmas gift for your pregnant wife or girlfriend?

Of course, as the owner of First Peek Ultrasound, the leading 3D ultrasound center in the Chicago area, I am biased by the overwhelming satisfaction I see everyday when pregnant women see and bond with their baby.  So I would say that a gift certificate for a 3D/4D ultrasound at your local 3D ultrasound studio would be the ideal gift for your pregnant wife or girlfriend this year for Christmas, Hannukah, Kwanzaa, or winter solstice.

Another great gift for a pregnant woman is to pamper her with a one-hour pregnancy massage.  In case you are not certified yourself in massage therapy or prenatal massage, you can now get a prenatal massage at our pregnancy spa located within our studio.

Other great Christmas gifts for pregnant women:

  • Rocking chair

Believe it or not, rocking chairs are not just for grandmothers.  As pregnant women progress through their pregnancy, they have an  increasing desire for a comfortable place to sit.  And the rocking chair continues to be useful even after the baby is born as it makes a perfect place to breastfeed your baby.  Where can you get a good rocking chair?  From personal experience, the best way is to shop for a rocking chair off-line.  Yes, actually go to a physical store, such as Baby’s R Us so she can try out different rocking chairs. 

  • Maternity clothes

As her husband/boyfriend, you are in the unique position to know what would look good on her.  While she may have already bought a lot of maternity clothes with one thing in mind–what will be the most comfortable, you can buy something specially catered to what would look great on her.  This can include maternity jeans, maternity sleepwear, maternity lingerie, and other maternity dresses.  Not all maternity clothes have to be large, pink, and baggy.  A sleek fitted black dress that stretches as the belly grows makes for a great gift.

  • Pregnancy pillow

Give your pregnant loved one the gift she craves–sleep!  The pregnancy pillow helps with back pain and helps her find the right position so she can sleep.  Also, she will probably continue to use the pillow after the baby is born as a place for nursing, a rest area, and a play area for the newborn baby.

We want to hear from pregnant women who loved their gifts they received for the holidays on previous years.  What worked and what didn’t?  Any horrible gifts we should avoid?

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Ob/gyn Hypocrisy Regarding 3D Ultrasounds-Part 1

In what may become a ten part series, I am about to undertake a comprehensive treatise on the inner workings of the mentality of ob/gyn physicians in relation to their disdain and disapproval of 3D ultrasounds.  This disapproval is not unanimous by far.  In fact, since we have started our business in September, 2008, we have found more and more ob/gyn doctors and midwives approving and even recommending our business to their pregnant patients.  This series of articles is solely dedicated to those ob/gyn doctors who have told their patients to not get a 3D ultrasound because it is not medically necessary or that it is unsafe for a slew of other reasons.

Because I know that many of you may not have time to read the entire series of articles, I will just write my final point here:  Ob/gyn physicians do not approve of  3D and 4D ultrasound services only and precisely because they are not the ones profiting from this service. 

Although a few ob/gyn’s are clearly motivated in their discouragment of the practice for this profit motive (and I will pinpoint these ob/gyn physicians at a later date), many ob/gyn physicians do not have such a clear intention in their minds, and their discouragement of the practice may be more unconsciously influenced by the fact that they are not profiting from the service.  This is much the same way as physicians have been found to increase their recommendation of drugs that happen to be advertised on the pens that they write with which have been given to them by drug reps. 

Other ob/gyn physicians simply follow the advice of these aforementioned ob/gyn physicians, until it has gotten to the point where there has developed a culture of disdain for 3D ultrasound services.  This disdain is not rooted on any solid ground, although there are many reasons that ob/gyn physicians have brought up once this disdain has set in.

To further prove the point, a few ob/gyn physicians have opened up 3D ultrasound practices themselves, proving the point that that 3D ultrasounds are bad unless they own the 3D ultrasound facility themselves.

As part of the series, I will explore each of the reasons that ob/gyn physicians hate 3D ultrasounds and often tell their pregnant patients not to get this service, thus depriving these pregnant women of the opportunity to see and bond with their baby in this unique way.

This series of articles is meant to be a controversial, no holds barred, account.  I will definitely anger and upset some ob/gyn physicians.  And for that, I would like to apologize in advance to the ob/gyn physicians who do silently recommend my services to their patients and who have to work with these angry ob/gyn physicians.

In this article, I will attack head on the notion that 3D ultrasounds are wrong because they are elective and not necessary.  I will show that many ob/gyn physicians do not actually care about what is actually medically necessary or not.  When it comes down to it, many ob/gyn physicians will go along with something that is not medically necessary if it provides them more money or more convenience.  This can be seen in the elective C-section rate, which has been increasing steadily.

The following article discusses elective inductions of labor.  Again, elective inductions of labor are, by definition, not medically necessary.  Yet 20% of pregnancies are induced, and 10% of pregnancies are induced electively, by ob/gyn doctors, according to the following article, taken from MSNBC, and can be also seen here.

WASHINGTON – Hoping to schedule your baby’s birth while your mother’s in town, or before the doctor goes on vacation? Labor is becoming less of a late-night surprise, but some hospitals are starting to tighten the rules for elective deliveries — because some babies are being delivered too early.

More hospitals are expected to crack down as regulators begin new quality measurements next spring that aim to reduce too-early elective inductions and first-time cesareans.

Induced labor is on the rise for lots of reasons, some medical and some not. But recent research shows a troubling link between elective inductions and these so-called “late preemies.” These aren’t the dire too-small babies that the word premature conjures, but near-term babies who nonetheless are at higher risk of breathing disorders and other problems than babies who finish their very last weeks in the womb.

 “It was an ‘aha’ moment for me,” recalls Dr. Bryan Oshiro of his visit to a Utah intensive care nursery several years ago, where neonatologists pointed to babies there simply because they’d been induced too soon.

New guidelines will require that a mother’s cervix be nearly ready for natural labor, and limit the hospital beds available for elective inductions.

More hospitals are expected to start enforcing that criteria this spring, when the Joint Commission that regulates health quality will require hospitals to report all elective deliveries and the gestational age to its public database, providing peer pressure for improvement. Hospitals also will have to report cesareans for first-time mothers, too often a result of a failed induction.

“That’s not a good outcome for the baby or the mom,” says Joint Commission President Dr. Mark Chassin. “We believe this will be a very important driver of improvement in perinatal care.”

1 in 4 inductions were before 39 weeks
National guidelines from the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists have long discouraged elective deliveries before the 39th week of pregnancy. But some hospitals that took a close look were surprised. At Utah’s Intermountain Healthcare, for example, 28 percent of elective deliveries were breaking ACOG’s rule in 2001, Oshiro told a March of Dimes meeting on preventable prematurity this month.

Most were being induced in week 37, such a small difference that local obstetricians argued it wasn’t a problem. So Oshiro pulled the medical charts and found those near-term babies had more than double the risk of ending up in neonatal ICU, suffering respiratory distress, even needing a ventilator.

It took several years of policing: Inductions now are allowed only after meeting a checklist of requirements. But today, only about 3 percent of Intermountain’s elective deliveries occur before 39 weeks — and infant hospitalizations have dropped, saving money, too, says Oshiro, now a maternal-fetal medicine specialist at Loma Linda University in California. He’s about to pilot a similar program at hospitals in that area.

“If there’s no need to intervene, please don’t intervene,” is Oshiro’s message.

1 in 5 new moms induced
Labor is induced in more than one in five births, double the rate in 1990, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Many cases are for clear health reasons, such as a problem with the fetus or a sick mom or a pregnancy that has dragged well beyond the woman’s due date. 

There’s little data on how many are elective. But a Hospital Corporation of America study of nearly 18,000 births at 27 of its hospitals around the country suggests 10 percent of all births are performed electively before the 39-week mark. (That date is considered the point at which doctors can be sure a pregnancy has reached full-term, typically defined as 40 weeks give or take about a week.)

There are many reasons to perform an elective induction, such as if mom lives two hours from a hospital, notes Dr. John Fisch of the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center’s Magee-Women’s Hospital.

Patient and doctor preference helped drive the rise in inductions, such as women timing grandma’s arrival to take care of the siblings, or minimizing 3 a.m. deliveries. Then there’s defensive medicine, where doctors worried about litigation induce for minor reasons like a slight uptick of the mother’s blood pressure.

So Pittsburgh also had “a little bit of a hard sell” after discovering nearly 12 percent of elective deliveries broke the 39-week rule in 2004, Fisch says. “It was perceived to be a safe and effective way in delivering a baby — and it is, as long as it meets certain criteria.”

After Magee began strict enforcement — requiring that a mother’s cervix be nearly ready for natural labor, and limiting the beds available for elective inductions — too-early inductions dropped to 4 percent by 2007 and are “effectively zero” today, Fisch says. Overall, elective inductions dropped 30 percent.

When ob/gyn physicians as a whole have been found to perform elective inductions in 10% of pregnant women, as a matter of convenience, whether it is for the physician’s convenience or the mother’s, then they have no basis at all to make the argument that 3D ultrasounds should not be performed because it is not medically necessary.

3D ultrasounds are not performed for the mother’s convenience or simply for entertainment.  3D ultrasounds, along with many other services and products that have been used by pregnant women for centuries, have served to fulfill a deep need of pregnant women and the dads to see and bond with their unborn baby.

It has been shown that 3D ultrasounds increase the bonding between mother and unborn child.  This is probably due to the very real emotional connection that occurs when visually seeing your child.  This should not be trivialized just because it is not medically necessary.  There are many things that are not medically necessary and yet still can fulfill a real need in society, such as weddings and baby showers.  The 3D ultrasound can be yet another rite of passage of pregnancy.

If you are pregnant and believe that your 3D ultrasound fulfilled a need, whether it felt like a biological need, emotional need, psychological need, or spiritual need, we would love to hear your perspective.

Next: Is the 3D ultrasound machine a medical device, and can medical devices only be used for medical purposes?  We’ll see what ob/gyn’s say and what they actually do.

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How to get the best pictures on a 3D ultrasound

Many people ask us how to get the best pictures on their 3D ultrasound.  We have included a number of tips below.

  1. Go at the right time within your pregnancy.
    • If you are just interested in checking the gender, you can go as early as 15 weeks to First Peek Ultrasound.  Any earlier, and the results may not be accurate, leading to an extra coat of paint for your bedroom.
    • If you want to see pictures of your baby, it is not recommended to get a 3D ultrasound under 17 weeks.  In one study, mothers seeing their baby under 17 weeks actually decreased bonding, since the mothers felt that the baby did not look like a baby.
    • To get good pictures, 3D ultrasounds are best performed between 20 and 32 weeks, and the best pictures are between 24 and 30 weeks.
    • Mothers with twins or triplets should come a little earlier, between 22 and 28 weeks.
    • Heavier-set women have a much more narrow window of opportunity to get good pictures, and it is best for them to come between 28 and 30 weeks.
    • If you would like to get a closeup shot of the face, then 28 to 32 weeks is the best time.
    • After 35 weeks, there is less fluid around the baby to work with, which can lead to suboptimal results. Also, after 35 weeks, the baby may have already descended into the pelvis, making getting any view of the baby impossible
  2. Drink plenty of water for 1-2 weeks before your appointment.
    • This means eight 8-ounce glasses a day.
    • This helps clear up the amniotic fluid and
    • Ensures that there is enough fluid around the baby.
    • Start well in advance; it doesn’t do much good to only drink water the night before or the morning of your 3D ultrasound.
  3. Be comfortable.
    • You do not need to have a full bladder, as you would with your medical ultrasound.
    • This is your time, and you want to be comfortable and relaxed so you can enjoy watching your baby
  4. See your baby move in 4D by scheduling your appointment at a time that you think your baby is most likely to be awake and moving.
    • After 19 weeks, your baby is already developing a sleep pattern, and you may be able to predict the time that your baby is most likely to be awake.
    • If your baby is asleep at the time of your ultrasound appointment and you want to make your baby move, try drinking some orange juice. This has been shown to help stimulate the baby to move.
    • For some women, chocolate also works. 
    • Otherwise, try walking around and then come back.
    • Drinking coffee, soda, or other caffeinated beverages may be harmful to your baby and are generally not advised.  In the past, ob/gyn physicians have recommended that pregnant women drink no more than one cup of coffee a day.  More recently, a study has shown that even one cup of coffee a day can have some minimal effect on the baby as well.
  5. Maintain a good weight through your pregnancy.
    • It is a well-known secret among ultrasound technicians that they have a much more difficult time getting beautiful images of the baby on obese pregnant women as well as diagnostic images.  In some cases, obesity has been associated with adverse medical outcomes precisely because of the difficulty of obtaining diagnostic imaging to detect and prevent medical problems.  Obesity in pregnancy can lead to many other problems besides not getting the ideal 3D ultrasound images, such as worsening heartburn, increased back pain, a higher risk of gestational diabetes, a higher rate of C-sections, and even congenital heart defects in the baby.  Also, obesity in the mother during pregnancy has been linked to obesity and Type II diabetes in the child.  If you are already overweight, at least be sure to gain the recommended weight gain of pregnancy, and you will be way ahead of the game, since most obese women gain much more than the recommended weight during pregnancy.  See our full article on obesity in pregnancy here.
  6. Make sure you go to a 3D ultrasound center that allows you to have sufficient time during your appointment. 
    • At First Peek Ultrasound, the Premium Package allows you more than enough time to get really good pictures of your baby and a free return visit if you are not able to get good pictures of your baby the first time.
  7. Finally, have a positive attitude.
    • Not every baby is going to cooperate or be in the perfect position to get good baby pictures.
    • The pictures you get depend on a lot of factors, including the position of the baby, the placenta, and the umbilical cord.
    • Although for some women, the pictures of their baby may not look as clear or as ideal as the pictures on our website or brochure, yet many of these women have told us that their 3D ultrasound pictures are even more beautiful, because it is their baby.
    • Likewise, some babies may have their hands in front of their face.  This actually makes for very cute pictures and even gives you a glimpse into their personality.  I myself was pleasantly amazed when I saw my newborn son repeatedly put his hands in front of his mouth whenever he was laughing.  I then realized that what I saw on his 4D ultrasound was him laughing!

If you have any additional tips, please write them below in the comments.

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A valid argument against getting a 3D ultrasound

There is one argument against getting a 3D ultrasound that I have not been able to argue against. The argument states that the luxurious spending on something unessential and for your own enjoyment is a detriment to society. In other words:
It’s too expensive and you could be using your money in other ways, such as by giving that money in charity.

I do not have an argument against this. If this is your reason for not getting a 3D ultrasound, I wholeheartedly respect this. I do want to urge you to actually set aside this money and actually give this money in charity rather than just using this argument on a theoretical basis. However, keep in mind that steps you take to make your motherhood and fatherhood more real for you by visualizing your child and spending time planning for your child can motivate you to make positive changes in the world in order to prepare this world for your child. What we have done at First Peek Ultrasound to include these aspirations are the following:

1. We have now made getting a 3D ultrasound as cheap as possible but still allowing us to pay our staff and stay in business, so you can use the money you saved on other things, including charity.
2. We donate 50% of our profit to a non-profit organization to establish peace and combat terrorism worldwide. This is not a marketing gimmick. It is what comes naturally after having seen what happens when there is no peace during my recent military deployment in Iraq.
3. We encourage our customers to donate an equal amount of money that they spend on getting a 3D ultrasound with us on a charity of their choice to help prepare the world for their baby. This way, 3D ultrasounds become a positive force in society.

If you have any questions or would like more details, please email us at firstpeek@oakparkultrasound.com

Has anyone out there felt guilty on spending money to see their baby? What did you end up doing? We would like to hear from you.

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Is 3D ultrasound safe?

Every once in a while, we get a question as to whether 3D ultrasounds are safe. As a board-certified pediatrician, I have a bias towards making sure things are safe for the baby, and I researched the safety of 3D ultrasounds extensively before deciding to see my own baby in 3D when my wife was pregnant. As a father, being able to see my baby through this window moved me so much, that I felt like I had to bring this experience to others.

Just to set the record straight, 3D ultrasound uses the same ultrasound waves used in your doctor’s office, with the same intensity, and for the same length of time. In 35 years of widespread almost universal use of ultrasounds, there has not been a single known case of a miscarriage or abnormality attributed to the use of ultrasounds. Its safety profile has been proven over the decades.

This being said, I do want to deal with a few arguments here. Also, I am so sure about the safety of what we do that I will open it up for discussion here on this blog. If you have any research or factual evidence on 3D ultrasounds being unsafe, then please bring it here. If you prove to me that 3D ultrasounds are unsafe for either the mother or the child, I will be the first to close down this studio and be on the forefront of shutting down all the others as well.

The arguments that are not valid are as follows:
“We just don’t know about the safety, and it is not necessary, so we should avoid it.”
That argument can be used for cell phones, microwaves, and a thousand other things and dismisses the very real benefits that pregnant women get when viewing their baby while pregnant. Also, it is impossible to prove something is 100% without any harm. We can only prove if there is a harm. The best we can hope for is a long track record of use without any known harms, which already exists for ultrasounds.

“It is not medically indicated.”
Who said this is a medical procedure? Seeing your baby for the first time while you are pregnant is an emotional, social, and cultural phenomenon that is spreading and soon taking over. Baby showers and bar mitzvahs are also not “medically indicated.” Also, just to point out the hypocrisy of those bringing forth these arguments, there are ob/gyn physicians who strongly advise against 3D ultrasounds because they are not medically indicated and yet perform elective circumcisions on a routine basis (also not medically indicated), perform elective C-sections for social reasons or to fit their own schedules (also not medically indicated), and even will allow their own patients to come back for an extra 2D ultrasound, off the books, to see if it’s a boy or a girl. It makes me wonder if the real issue they have with 3D ultrasounds is that they are not making any money off of it themselves and begrudge those who do. Meanwhile, there are plenty of ob/gyn physicians who have set up their own 3D ultrasound clinics across the U.S. after they have retired from their regular role as a physician.

“This is not what this medical device was intended for.”
It is a curious state of affairs when GE’s official policy is that the 3D ultrasound machine is not intended for non-medical or entertainment purposes and yet on their website and on all of their brochures, a picture of a pregnant woman seeing her baby in 3D is prominently displayed (and she is not wearing a medical gown). What irks me more is that major advances in 3D ultrasound technology and 3D ultrasound techniques have grown out of the increased use of this machine by ob/gyn’s and ultrasound technicians, spurred by the demand of these elective ultrasounds. You can’t have it both ways, GE. You can’t have your biggest clientele be 3D ultrasound studios and yet declare publicly that you have no idea that these machines are being used in this way.

But assuming that the above statement is true, that 3D ultrasound machines are not being used “as intended,” this still is not a valid argument, as most medical instruments have been used in more ways than as intended. For example, the stethoscope is intended to be used by a physician or nurse to hear heart sounds. However, as a pediatrician, I have used my trusted stethoscope to hear arterial blood flow in a baby’s head to diagnose an AV fistula. No one chided me for using the stethoscope as something other than what was intended. I have knocked it against a child’s knees to test for reflexes; I have used it as a toy pendulum to distract an infant as I examined his ears; I have held it outside my car window, using it as a signal, as I rested on my horn, and sped through red lights reaching the hospital just in time to resusscitate a blue baby just born who wasn’t breathing. I have worn my stethoscope around my neck as part of my uniform and clothing so as to indicate to others who was running the code. I have used that same stethoscope to hold my seat at the hospital cafeteria. I have used it as collateral when I needed money to eat and my paycheck wasn’t going to arrive until the next week. I have tried to use it to hypnotize someone, swaying it back and forth in front of my 2-year-old son, trying desperately to get him to sleep, but it didn’t work. I have even once used my stethoscope as a short-range weapon when stationed in Iraq (don’t even ask me about that one!), and I now have it hanging in my closet as I currently use it as a reminder of my crazy past. Ultrasounds were never meant for medical use to begin with–they were initially used to find cracks in dams. It was a doctor who decided to use it to detect abscesses and other things within the body which led to how it is used today. At that time, you could have told the doctor that it is not being used as intended, but I am glad no one did.

The FDA advises against it.
The FDA knows that there is no evidence linking any harm to the use of 3D ultrasound, as stated on their website, and so they are not legally allowed to ban 3D ultrasounds. They can say that this is a medical device used for non-medical purposes. But I can also easily say that this is a non-medical device sometimes used for medical purposes.

It’s not natural.
Yes, using a 3D ultrasound machine to see your baby has not been done in the more natural state of things during the caveman days. However, it is very natural for a woman to want to see her baby, bond with her baby, and these feelings begin while you are still pregnant. It is also very natural for a father to want to experience this joy as well. From the beginning of time, cavemen dads have been putting their ears up against the cavemen mom’s belly, using regular sound, not ultrasound, to hear their baby’s heart beating. The 3D ultrasound is just a natural extension of these deep desires.

Also, just as it is not natural to drive or fly by airplane, we do many things that are in retrospect very natural when you consider the other animals that can run as fast as a car or fly as high as an airplane. Likewise, there are many animals that employ ultrasounds to communicate and navigate through their world, including elephants, dolphins, and bats. When the tsunami hit Indonesia, it was natural ultrasound signals created by the tsunami that warned the elephants to flee from the shoreline moments before the tsunami struck. It was the humans who followed the elephants that benefited from these natural ultrasounds.

Do you have an argument against 3D ultrasounds? Do you have research or evidence showing that it is unsafe? Please write it here in the comments.

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3D ultrasounds banned in Connecticut

This month (Aug. 2009), Connecticut completely banned elective 3D ultrasounds for “entertainment purposes only.”    This was done in order to ensure that women get prenatal care and so that pregnant women do not go to places that are unregulated.  The concern was that the machine may not be up to standard and the technicians may not be certified or trained.

Illinois had discussed the idea of regulating the 3D ultrasound industry several years back.  In this bill, all 3D ultrasound centers would have to have a medical director, have registered ultrasound technicians who were certified and trained, these centers would require proof of having prenatal care, and the ultrasounds would have to be limited to 30 minutes.  This bill had died on the table and has not been looked at since then.

After this ban, 3D ultrasound centers, ultrasound techs, and pregnant women have been speaking out to tell the other side of the story.  3D ultrasounds, when done correctly, are performed by certified ultrasound technicians in a center with a medical director for added oversight with machines that are checked and serviced regularly for pregnant women who already have prenatal care and have had a medical ultrasound done.  This is how it’s done here at First Peek Ultrasound and in most places here in the Chicago area.

Let us be clear.  We would love to have the 3D ultrasound industry regulated.  Since we already fulfill the strict regulations that the Illinois bill would require, these regulations would actually benefit us.  But to completely ban the practice and shut down these local businesses is overkill and removes the choice of pregnant women to see and bond with their baby.

We are interested to hear what you think of this ban.  Whether you are a customer of First Peek or you are just browsing through, we want to hear from pregnant women who have gotten a 3D ultrasound done or are considering one.  Put in your comments below.

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Music for your 4D ultrasound DVD

Although we have standard music placed in the background of the DVD of your 3D/4D ultrasound session, many customers ask if they can bring in their own music. You certainly can bring in any music you like, on a CD, or on any MP3 player.

Some of our customers have asked for recommendations for music.

What music did you have recorded on the DVD of your 3D ultrasound session? What music would you recommend?

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Upload Your 4D Ultrasound movie onto YouTube

Having your friends and family get instant access to your baby’s 4D ultrasound movie is simple and surprisingly quick. Upload your movie onto YouTube and you can let anyone in the world watch your baby in 4D. Or you can keep the movie private on YouTube as well, allowing only those with a password to watch it.

Uploading your video onto YouTube is mostly straightforward, but for your convenience, here are the complete instructions to upload your 4D ultrasound video onto YouTube.

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