D
Diane M. Twickler
Researcher at University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
Publications - 155
Citations - 4592
Diane M. Twickler is an academic researcher from University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pregnancy & Magnetic resonance imaging. The author has an hindex of 34, co-authored 139 publications receiving 4077 citations. Previous affiliations of Diane M. Twickler include University of Texas at Dallas & Texas Woman's University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Effect of Maternal Obesity on the Ultrasound Detection of Anomalous Fetuses
TL;DR: With increasing maternal BMI, decreased detection of anomalous fetuses with either standard or targeted ultrasonography is found, a difference of at least 20% when women of normal BMI were compared with obese women.
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Pregnancy outcomes after antepartum diagnosis of oligohydramnios at or beyond 34 weeks' gestation.
Brian M. Casey,Donald D. McIntire,Steven L. Bloom,Michael J. Lucas,Rigoberto Santos,Diane M. Twickler,Ronald M. Ramus,Kenneth J. Leveno +7 more
TL;DR: Perinatal outcomes in pregnancies with oligohydramnios were compared with those with an amniotic fluid index of >50 mm and increased perinatal morbidity and mortality.
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Cerebral infarction in eclampsia
TL;DR: The spectrum of cerebral lesions in eclampsia as seen with MRI varies from initially reversible areas of vasogenic edema that may progress to cytotoxic edema and infarction in up to a fourth of women as discussed by the authors.
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Persistence of placenta previa according to gestational age at ultrasound detection
TL;DR: Gestational age at ultrasound detection of placenta previa may be used to predict likelihood of previa persistence, and after midpregnancy, risk of persistence appears to be higher than previously reported.
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Color flow mapping for myometrial invasion in women with a prior cesarean delivery
Diane M. Twickler,Michael J. Lucas,Amy Brown Balis,Rigoberto Santos-Ramos,Lisa B. Martin,Shirley Malone,Beverly Barton Rogers +6 more
TL;DR: Investigation of the utility of color flow mapping in the prediction of placental myometrial invasion in women with Cesarean delivery found that the measurement of <1 mm for the smallestMyometrial thickness or presence of large intraplacental lakes was predictive of myometrian invasion.