A chorionicity scan identifies whether twins have separate placentas or share one placenta. This single early ultrasound detail changes the entire pregnancy monitoring plan, especially the need for frequent scans in monochorionic twins.
The first question in a twin pregnancy is not only “are there two babies?” The more important fetal medicine question is: do they have separate placentas or a shared placenta?
Dr. Kunda Shahane evaluates chorionicity and amnionicity using the number of placental masses, membrane insertion, membrane thickness, lambda sign or T-sign, amniotic sacs and early fetal anatomy. This helps create the correct scan calendar from the beginning.
Chorionicity tells us about the placenta. Amnionicity tells us about the amniotic sac.
Two placentas and two sacs. This is usually the lowest-risk twin type, though still higher-risk than singleton pregnancy.
One shared placenta and two sacs. These twins need closer surveillance for TTTS, TAPS and selective growth restriction.
One shared placenta and one shared sac. This is rare and needs very specialised high-risk pregnancy planning.
If early images are missing or the report is unclear, expert review is important because management may change significantly.
Chorionicity is easiest to determine in the first trimester. Later in pregnancy, placentas may appear fused and the inter-twin membrane may be difficult to interpret, so early scan images and reports are very valuable.
A proper chorionicity scan uses multiple signs together, not just one quick view.
| Ultrasound feature | What is checked | Usually suggests | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number of placental masses | Whether there appear to be two separate placentas or one shared placental mass. | Two placentas: often dichorionic One placenta: review carefully | Separate vs shared placenta decides the surveillance frequency. |
| Lambda / twin-peak sign | A triangular projection of placental tissue at the base of the inter-twin membrane. | Usually dichorionic | Best seen early; supports DCDA classification when clearly present. |
| T-sign | The thin inter-twin membrane meets the placenta at a right angle without chorionic tissue between layers. | Usually monochorionic diamniotic | Suggests shared placenta and need for monochorionic surveillance. |
| Inter-twin membrane thickness | Thick membrane usually has more layers; thin membrane suggests fewer layers. | Thicker: dichorionic Thinner: monochorionic | Helpful when placenta number alone is not clear. |
| Presence or absence of membrane | Whether a clear membrane separates the twins. | No membrane: possible monoamniotic twins | Monoamniotic twins need very high-risk care and close planning. |
| Amniotic sacs | Whether twins are in two sacs or one shared sac. | Diamniotic vs monoamniotic | Amnionicity influences monitoring and delivery planning. |
| Early scan images and reports | Review of previous dating/NT scan images when current scan is late or unclear. | Essential if chorionicity is uncertain | Early images can prevent wrong classification and wrong monitoring schedule. |
Every twin pregnancy report should clearly mention chorionicity and amnionicity. If your report says “twins” but does not mention placenta-sharing or sacs, it is worth getting the report reviewed by a fetal medicine specialist.
Dichorionic twins usually need serial growth and wellbeing monitoring. Monochorionic twins need closer surveillance because a shared placenta can lead to TTTS, TAPS, selective fetal growth restriction and sudden fluid or Doppler changes.
That is why chorionicity is not a small technical detail — it is the foundation of twin pregnancy management.
The pregnancy usually follows a dichorionic twin monitoring pathway with serial growth scans, anomaly scan, Doppler when needed and third-trimester wellbeing planning.
A monochorionic surveillance pathway is planned, usually with scans every 2 weeks from around 16 weeks to screen for TTTS/TAPS and growth discordance.
This needs urgent high-risk counselling and coordinated planning with obstetric and neonatal teams because both babies share the same sac.
Early ultrasound images, IVF records if applicable, previous twin scan reports and gestational age are reviewed first.
The placenta, amniotic sacs, membrane and relationship between the twins are examined systematically.
The placental insertion of the inter-twin membrane is carefully assessed, especially in the first trimester.
Viability, dating, early fetal anatomy and any obvious discordance are documented for Twin A and Twin B.
Based on chorionicity and amnionicity, the scan schedule is explained clearly to the family and referring obstetrician.
Do not wait until late pregnancy. The earlier chorionicity is recorded, the safer and clearer the monitoring plan becomes.
This is a very important window for dating, NT scan, early anatomy, chorionicity and amnionicity documentation.
If your report says “twin pregnancy” but does not mention DCDA, MCDA, MCMA, chorionicity or amnionicity, bring it for review.
Bring the earliest pregnancy scan, any IVF/embryo transfer record if applicable, current ultrasound images, NT scan report, anomaly scan report if already done, and obstetric notes. Early images are especially useful for confirming chorionicity.
“In twin pregnancy, chorionicity is the first diagnosis that guides everything else. If twins share a placenta, the monitoring has to become more frequent and more detailed. A clear early chorionicity scan helps us protect both babies by choosing the right surveillance pathway from the beginning.”
Chorionicity tells whether twins have separate placentas or share one placenta. Amnionicity tells whether the twins have separate amniotic sacs or share one sac.
The first trimester is best, especially around 11–14 weeks, because the membrane and placental junction are easier to evaluate.
DCDA means dichorionic diamniotic twins — two placentas and two amniotic sacs. Sometimes placentas may appear fused later, which is why early confirmation is useful.
MCDA means monochorionic diamniotic twins — one shared placenta and two amniotic sacs. These twins need closer monitoring for TTTS, TAPS and selective growth restriction.
MCMA means monochorionic monoamniotic twins — one shared placenta and one shared amniotic sac. This is rare and requires specialised high-risk care.
The lambda or twin-peak sign is a triangular projection of chorionic tissue at the membrane insertion. When clearly seen early, it usually supports dichorionic twin pregnancy.
The T-sign occurs when the thin inter-twin membrane meets the placenta without a chorionic peak. When clearly seen early, it usually supports monochorionic diamniotic twin pregnancy.
It can sometimes be assessed later, but accuracy may be lower because placentas can appear fused and the membrane is harder to interpret. Early reports and images are very helpful.
Book a chorionicity and amnionicity scan with Dr. Kunda Shahane at Mayflower Fetal Medicine & High-Risk Pregnancy Centre, Dhantoli, Nagpur. Bring your earliest scan report and images so the twin pregnancy pathway can be planned correctly.
Mayflower Fetal Medicine & High-Risk Pregnancy Centre, Dhantoli, Nagpur, provides fetal ultrasound, prenatal diagnosis, fetal echocardiography, Doppler studies, genetic counseling and high-risk pregnancy care under Dr. Kunda Shahane.

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