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  • Title: Twins' temperament: early prenatal sonographic assessment and postnatal correlation.
    Author: Degani S, Leibovitz Z, Shapiro I, Ohel G.
    Journal: J Perinatol; 2009 May; 29(5):337-42. PubMed ID: 19158803.
    Abstract:
    OBJECTIVE: To study inter-twin differences in activity during early pregnancy and to examine their relationship to subsequent infant twins' temperament. STUDY DESIGN: Measures of fetal motor activity (frequency, duration and number of movements) were collected from 26 twin pairs during ultrasound nuchal translucency scan at late first trimester and early second trimester (11 to 14 weeks gestation). In twenty-two patients, the twins were dizygotic (dichorionic); of them, 13 twin pairs were of different sexes, five were both females and four were both males. Of the four monozygotic twin pregnancies, two were dichorionic and two were monochorionic, three were both females.The more active fetus in each pair was noted according to the position and/or sex without reporting to parents. Reported maternal perception of the more active twin was documented at the mid-trimester anatomical scan. Maternally reported postnatal temperament data of the infants were collected at 3 and 6 months, using Rothbarts' Infant Behavior Questionnaire (IBQ). RESULTS: After birth, maternal reports on infants' temperament and the more active twin in each pair were in good correlation with prenatal inter-twin differences in activity. The receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves shows a better performance of ultrasound compared with maternal perception in prediction of the more active twin. CONCLUSIONS: The features of fetal neurobehavioral activity provide the basis for individual differences in twins' activity in infancy. Differences in activity in early pregnancy even before the emergence of fetal behavioral patterns were followed by temperamental differences postnatally.
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