🦴 When Should We Suspect Fetal Dwarfism?

Short long bones on ultrasound do not automatically mean skeletal dysplasia.

The key question is:

Is this true skeletal dysplasia — or simply growth restriction?

Step 1️⃣ Is it just short femur?

Before labeling anything as dwarfism, consider:

  • Is FL < -2 SD?
  • Are BPD and AC normal?
  • Is the growth pattern symmetric?
  • Is there interval growth?

If shortening is isolated and proportional,

FGR or constitutional small size is more likely.

Step 2️⃣ Is the shortening disproportionate?

This is where suspicion increases.

Look at:

  • FL/AC ratio
  • FL/BPD ratio
  • Rhizomelic shortening (proximal segments shorter than distal)

Disproportionate limb shortening suggests skeletal dysplasia, not simple growth delay.

Step 3️⃣ Are there abnormal bone features?

This is critical.

Check for:

  • Bone bowing
  • Fractures
  • Poor mineralization
  • Narrow thorax
  • Short ribs
  • Abnormal skull shape

Once bone morphology is abnormal,

we are no longer dealing with simple FGR.

Common Types of Skeletal Dysplasia

🦴 Achondroplasia

  • Rhizomelic shortening
  • Macrocephaly
  • Frontal bossing
  • Usually detected in late second or third trimester

🦴 Thanatophoric Dysplasia

  • Severe bowing (“telephone receiver” femur)
  • Very narrow thorax
  • Cloverleaf skull possible
  • Often lethal

Prognosis differs dramatically depending on the type.

🔎 The Most Important Concept

In fetal skeletal evaluation:

It’s not about length alone.

It’s about proportion, morphology, and thoracic size.

A short femur does not equal dwarfism.

A disproportionate, abnormal skeleton might.