Anatomy Scan Drill

The image is in front of you. Read what's described, name the most likely diagnosis. Ten findings drawn from sixty — different every run.

No labels, no pre-sorted differential — just the sonographic picture, the way it appears on the screen. Some are single anomalies; some are constellations that point to a syndrome. You commit to the single most likely diagnosis, against the clock.

What you might see

CNSFace & neckChest HeartAbdominal wallGI RenalSkeletonMasses Aneuploidy markersSyndromesPlacenta & cord TwinsHydrops

Seconds per finding

Scoring: faster correct calls score higher. A streak builds a multiplier up to 3×; a wrong call or timeout breaks it. Some near-misses — a genuine differential — earn partial credit. After each answer you read the teaching point, then click the green button to continue. On desktop, press 1–6.

Evidence base

  1. Salomon LJ, Alfirevic Z, Berghella V, et al; ISUOG Clinical Standards Committee. ISUOG Practice Guidelines (updated): performance of the routine mid-trimester fetal ultrasound scan. Ultrasound Obstet Gynecol. 2022;59(6):840–856. doi:10.1002/uog.24888. Standard structures and views of the mid-trimester anatomy scan.
  2. American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine; American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists; Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine. AIUM–ACOG–SMFM Practice Parameter for the Performance of Detailed Second- and Third-Trimester Diagnostic Obstetric Ultrasound Examinations. Detailed (targeted) anatomy examination components.
  3. Individual diagnoses reflect established sonographic–pathologic correlations as described in standard prenatal-diagnosis references (e.g. Callen / Norton, Ultrasonography in Obstetrics and Gynecology). Findings are simplified for teaching; real cases require the full study and confirmatory testing.