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G. Egaña-Ugrinovic

Researcher at University of Barcelona

Publications -  13
Citations -  497

G. Egaña-Ugrinovic is an academic researcher from University of Barcelona. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pregnancy & Perfusion scanning. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 12 publications receiving 390 citations.

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Differences in cortical development assessed by fetal MRI in late-onset intrauterine growth restriction

TL;DR: Late-onset IUGR fetuses had a different pattern of cortical development assessed by MRI, supporting the existence of in utero brain reorganization, and Cortical development could be useful to define fetal brain imaging-phenotypes characteristic of IugR.
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Evidence of second-trimester changes in head biometry and brain perfusion in fetuses with congenital heart disease

TL;DR: To evaluate the associations between congenital heart disease (CHD) and head biometry and cerebrovascular blood flow dynamics at the time of diagnosis of CHD in the second trimester of pregnancy, a large number of mothers-to-be were diagnosed with CHD.
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Mid-gestation brain Doppler and head biometry in fetuses with congenital heart disease predict abnormal brain development at birth

TL;DR: The aim was to evaluate whether brain development in late pregnancy can be predicted by fetal brain Doppler, head biometry and the clinical form of CHD at the time of diagnosis.
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Brainstem and cerebellar differences and their association with neurobehavior in term small-for-gestational-age fetuses assessed by fetal MRI

TL;DR: Brain stem and cerebellar morphometric measurements are significantly different in term SGA fetuses, which are associated significantly with their neurobehavioral outcome, and this finding supports the existence of brain microstructural changes in SGA Fetuses and lays the basis for potential image biomarkers to detect fetuses who are at risk.
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Severity of Fetal Brain Abnormalities in Congenital Heart Disease in Relation to the Main Expected Pattern of in utero Brain Blood Supply

TL;DR: All fetuses with CHD showed significant brain developmental changes, but differences were more pronounced in CHD associated with an expected severe reduction in oxygenated blood supply to the brain.