A suspected cleft lip or palate on pregnancy ultrasound needs calm explanation, careful fetal facial assessment, and a structured plan. At Mayflower Fetal Medicine & High-Risk Pregnancy Centre, Nagpur, Dr. Kunda Shahane provides detailed evaluation, counselling, and coordination for families when cleft lip, cleft palate, or related facial findings are suspected.
The scan focuses on confirming the finding, checking for associated anomalies, and guiding parents about the next steps.
“When parents hear the word cleft, they are naturally worried. The first job of fetal medicine is to explain what exactly has been seen, whether it appears isolated or associated with other findings, and what can be planned before birth. Many families feel calmer when the diagnosis is explained step by step.”
A cleft is a gap in the upper lip, gum, or roof of the mouth region that occurs during early facial development. It may involve only the lip, the lip and gum, the palate, or a combination.
A suspected cleft should be assessed carefully to understand its extent and to look for any other structural findings in the baby, especially the heart, brain, limbs, kidneys, spine and growth.
Counselling helps parents understand the scan finding, likely postnatal care, feeding planning, possible surgery pathway, and whether genetic counselling or further testing should be discussed.
The purpose is not only to “see the face” but to understand the finding in a complete fetal medicine context. The scan combines facial anatomy views with a detailed systemic anomaly assessment.
```The upper lip, nose, nostrils, profile and jaw relationship are assessed using appropriate 2D and 3D views.
A full anomaly scan is important because cleft findings can sometimes occur along with other fetal structural or genetic conditions.
Parents receive a structured explanation and a plan for follow-up, delivery coordination and postnatal referral where appropriate.
A facial cleft finding is best interpreted by combining high-resolution imaging, detailed anomaly scan, clinical context, and compassionate counselling. The result should be explained clearly without giving false reassurance or unnecessary fear.
```The page includes visual sections so parents understand that the process is structured: confirm the finding, check the rest of the baby, counsel the family, and prepare the postnatal team.
```Detailed facial views help clarify what has been seen and whether additional views are needed.
The scan does not stop at the face. A full structural review helps classify the finding better.
Parents are guided about follow-up, genetic counselling, newborn assessment and specialist referral.
The exact counselling depends on what is visible on ultrasound, whether the finding is isolated, and whether there are other markers or anomalies.
```| Finding suspected | What it may mean | What is usually discussed |
|---|---|---|
| Cleft lip only | A gap in the upper lip region, sometimes easier to see on ultrasound than palate-only findings. | Detailed anomaly scan, 3D views if useful, newborn examination, feeding and surgical referral planning. |
| Cleft lip with possible palate involvement | The lip finding may extend towards the gum or palate region, but ultrasound confirmation can vary. | Extent assessment, associated anomaly check, genetic counselling discussion, postnatal cleft team planning. |
| Possible isolated cleft palate | The palate is inside the mouth and can be difficult to visualise clearly before birth. | Careful explanation of limitations, follow-up scan if needed, newborn mouth examination after delivery. |
| Cleft with other fetal findings | When additional anomalies or markers are present, broader evaluation may be needed. | Fetal echo, neurosonography, genetic counselling, invasive testing discussion where clinically indicated. |
The pathway is designed to reduce confusion. Parents leave with a written understanding of the scan finding, what has been checked, and what should happen next.
```The fetal face is assessed with appropriate views, and the scan is extended to review other fetal organs because the overall context matters.
Dr. Kunda Shahane explains whether the finding appears isolated on scan, whether views were complete, and whether further assessment is advisable.
If other markers, family history, abnormal screening results, or structural findings are present, genetic counselling and diagnostic testing options may be discussed.
The family may be guided about paediatrician review, feeding support, cleft surgeon referral and newborn evaluation after birth.
Mayflower Fetal Medicine uses GE Voluson Signature Expert — an AI-enabled fetal ultrasound platform that supports high-quality visualisation, structured scanning workflow and advanced fetal imaging.
```2D ultrasound remains essential for diagnostic assessment. 3D and 4D views may help parents understand the finding better and can support evaluation in selected cases, depending on fetal position and scan conditions.
A fetal medicine review is useful when a routine scan mentions cleft lip, cleft palate, abnormal fetal face, facial asymmetry, absent upper lip line, abnormal nose-lip view, or when the face could not be assessed properly.
```These answers are general and cannot replace a scan-based consultation. Your baby’s exact counselling depends on the ultrasound findings and pregnancy history.
```Many cleft lip cases can be suspected on the mid-pregnancy anomaly scan. Confirmation depends on fetal position, image quality, gestational age and the type of cleft.
No. Cleft palate, especially if present without cleft lip, can be difficult to diagnose before birth because the palate is inside the mouth.
Not always. Some clefts are isolated, while others may be associated with additional anomalies or genetic conditions. That is why a detailed anomaly scan and counselling are important.
Genetic counselling may be discussed if there are other scan findings, abnormal screening results, family history, or complex cleft pattern. The decision is individualised.
3D ultrasound can help visualise the face and explain the finding to parents, but diagnosis still depends on expert 2D assessment and the complete fetal evaluation.
Yes. When a cleft is suspected before birth, the family can be guided about newborn assessment, feeding support and referral to the appropriate cleft care team after delivery.
Cleft lip and palate counselling often connects with anomaly scan, genetic counselling, fetal diagnosis and high-risk pregnancy planning.
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Mayflower Fetal Medicine & High-Risk Pregnancy Centre
Surdham Complex, Behind Silver Palace Building, 2nd Lane from Panchsheel Square, Opposite Yashwant Stadium, Dhantoli, Nagpur — 440012.
Call: 0712-669-2706
WhatsApp: +91-8087471244
Email: contact@mayflowerclinic.in
Monday–Saturday: 10:00 AM – 6:00 PM
Sunday: Closed
Emergency high-risk referrals: WhatsApp +91-8087471244.
Mayflower Fetal Medicine Centre strictly complies with the Pre-Conception and Pre-Natal Diagnostic Techniques (Prohibition of Sex Selection) Act, 1994. Sex determination and sex-selective practices are strictly prohibited and punishable by law. All ultrasound and prenatal diagnostic services at this centre are performed exclusively for lawful medical indications — fetal anatomy assessment, fetal wellbeing, and diagnosis of maternal-fetal conditions. Disclosure of fetal sex is illegal and is not performed at this centre under any circumstances.
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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Surdham Complex, Behind Silver Palace Building, 2nd Lane from Panchsheel Sq., Opp. Yashwant Stadium, Dhantoli Nagpur - 440012
07126692706
whatsapp 8087471244
