When the Fetal Brain Protects Itself
In compromised fetuses, circulation changes before growth does.
Doppler allows us to see compensation
before structural abnormalities appear.
What Is Brain-Sparing?
When placental resistance increases:
- Umbilical artery resistance ↑
- Oxygen delivery ↓
- Fetal body responds
The fetus redistributes blood flow toward vital organs —
especially the brain.
This results in:
- Decreased MCA PI
- Increased diastolic flow in MCA
- “Low resistance” cerebral waveform
This is called the brain-sparing effect.
Doppler Pattern Summary
1️⃣ Umbilical Artery (UA)
- PI ↑
- S/D ↑
- Possible absent or reversed end-diastolic flow
2️⃣ Middle Cerebral Artery (MCA)
- PI ↓
- PSV may increase
- Increased diastolic flow
The key is the relationship between UA and MCA.
The Cerebroplacental Ratio (CPR)
CPR = MCA PI / UA PI
Low CPR suggests redistribution.
Even when growth is borderline normal,
a low CPR may indicate fetal compromise.
Clinical Meaning
Brain-sparing is not reassurance.
It is compensation.
It means:
The fetus is adapting.
But compensation does not last forever.
Persistent brain-sparing is associated with:
- IUGR
- Hypoxia
- Adverse perinatal outcome
Practical Interpretation Flow
If UA PI ↑
→ Check MCA PI
If MCA PI ↓
→ Consider redistribution
If CPR low
→ Closer monitoring required
Never interpret one vessel alone.
Important Technical Reminder
Brain-sparing diagnosis is highly angle-dependent.
✔ Ensure correct MCA sampling
✔ Keep angle as close to 0° as possible
✔ Avoid distal MCA measurement
✔ Repeat abnormal findings
Misalignment can falsely lower PI.
Before diagnosing redistribution,
verify technique.
Sonographer’s Note
Brain-sparing is fascinating —
the fetus protecting its own brain.
But as sonographers,
we must distinguish true redistribution
from technical illusion.
Because sometimes
what looks like compensation
is simply cosine at work.