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Low amniotic fluid evaluation · Nagpur

Oligohydramnios in Pregnancy Scan & Monitoring

When amniotic fluid is less than expected, the important question is not only “how low is the fluid?” but “why is it low, how is the baby growing, and what monitoring is needed next?”

Reviewed by Dr. Kunda Shahane, MBBS, MS, FIFM, FMF (London)
Focused liquor + growth + Doppler assessment

What we check carefully

At Mayflower Fetal Medicine & High-Risk Pregnancy Centre, low fluid is assessed together with fetal growth, Doppler blood flow, fetal kidneys/bladder, placental function, and maternal history.

Amniotic fluid measurement by AFI or deepest vertical pocket.
Growth scan and Doppler correlation, especially umbilical artery and MCA when indicated.
Counselling on surveillance, referral, timing, and realistic next steps.
Understanding the diagnosis

What is oligohydramnios?

Oligohydramnios means that the amniotic fluid around the baby is lower than expected for the stage of pregnancy. It may be isolated and mild, or it may be associated with fetal growth restriction, placental insufficiency, membrane leak, fetal kidney/urinary tract problems, post-date pregnancy, or maternal conditions such as high blood pressure.

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Fluid measurement

The scan measures amniotic fluid using standard ultrasound methods such as AFI or single deepest vertical pocket. A single low value is interpreted along with the full pregnancy picture.

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Growth correlation

Low fluid can sometimes be a sign that the placenta is not supporting fetal growth optimally. That is why estimated fetal weight, abdominal circumference, and growth trend matter.

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Doppler assessment

Doppler helps assess blood flow in selected fetal and placental vessels. It is especially useful when low fluid is seen with suspected fetal growth restriction or high-risk pregnancy.

Important: Low amniotic fluid does not automatically mean an emergency or a poor outcome. The seriousness depends on gestational age, severity, fetal growth, Doppler, fetal movements, membrane status, and the cause.
Why fluid may become low

Common causes we look for

The goal of a fetal medicine scan is to avoid giving only a label. Dr. Kunda Shahane evaluates the likely reason for low fluid and explains what the finding means for the pregnancy.

Placental or growth-related causes

  • Fetal growth restriction or small baby
  • Reduced placental function
  • High blood pressure or pre-eclampsia risk
  • Post-date pregnancy
  • Previous pregnancy with growth restriction or low fluid

Fluid leak or membrane-related causes

  • History suggesting leaking per vaginum
  • Preterm prelabour rupture of membranes
  • Low fluid after a procedure or clinical event
  • Need for correlation with obstetric examination

Fetal kidney or urinary tract causes

  • Reduced fetal urine production
  • Renal agenesis or severe renal anomalies
  • Bladder outlet obstruction in selected cases
  • Need for detailed anomaly scan and renal evaluation

Sometimes no clear cause is found

  • Mild isolated low fluid near term
  • Borderline liquor variation between scans
  • Need for repeat assessment rather than panic
  • Individualised monitoring plan based on risk
At Mayflower Clinic

What happens during an oligohydramnios scan?

The scan is usually painless and is performed on the abdomen. The evaluation is more detailed than only “fluid is low” because each associated factor changes counselling and management.

1

Confirm the fluid level

Amniotic fluid is measured carefully using AFI or deepest vertical pocket, avoiding cord loops and fetal parts while measuring.

2

Check fetal growth and wellbeing

Biometry, estimated fetal weight, abdominal circumference, fetal movements, tone, and breathing movements may be assessed depending on gestational age.

3

Assess Doppler blood flow

Umbilical artery, MCA, uterine artery, ductus venosus, or other Dopplers may be used when clinically indicated, especially with suspected growth restriction.

4

Look for the cause

Fetal kidneys, bladder filling, anatomy, placenta, cord, and maternal history are reviewed. If fluid leak is suspected, your obstetrician may advise clinical evaluation.

5

Plan surveillance or referral

Dr. Kunda explains whether repeat scan, Doppler surveillance, NST/CTG, obstetric review, admission, delivery planning, or second opinion is required.

Clinical meaning

How low fluid is interpreted

The same fluid measurement can mean different things at different stages of pregnancy. Early severe oligohydramnios is approached differently from mild low fluid close to term.

Finding What it may suggest What may be checked next
Borderline fluid May be a variation, dehydration-related change, early placental issue, or evolving low fluid. Repeat liquor assessment, fetal growth trend, maternal history, and follow-up scan timing.
Isolated low fluid near term May require closer fetal surveillance and obstetric decision-making depending on gestational age. NST/CTG if advised, fetal movements, repeat AFI/DVP, and delivery planning by the treating obstetrician.
Low fluid with small baby Can suggest fetal growth restriction or placental insufficiency. Detailed growth scan, umbilical artery Doppler, MCA Doppler when needed, and high-risk pregnancy review.
Very low fluid early in pregnancy Needs careful evaluation for membrane leak, fetal renal/urinary tract causes, or severe placental disease. Detailed anomaly scan, fetal renal assessment, genetic counselling in selected cases, and multidisciplinary planning.
Do not self-interpret AFI alone: A report value is only one part of the decision. The safest plan comes from combining scan findings, fetal movements, gestational age, maternal condition, and obstetric examination.
KS

Doctor’s note

“When fluid is low, parents naturally become anxious. My first step is to understand the reason — growth, Doppler, kidneys, placenta, leak, or term pregnancy — because the counselling and next step depend on the cause.”

Dr. Kunda Shahane is Central India’s first dedicated fetal medicine specialist, with nearly two decades of experience and 20,000+ fetuses evaluated. At Mayflower Clinic, oligohydramnios is assessed with fetal medicine expertise, not as a single isolated number.

Patient education video

Oligohydramnios explained in simple language

This video can help patients understand low amniotic fluid before or after consultation. Final decisions should always be made after scan findings and clinical evaluation.

Video: Oligohydramnios / low amniotic fluid patient education by Mayflower Fetal Medicine. Use this only for education; it does not replace your personalised consultation.
Technology matters

GE Voluson Signature Expert for detailed fetal assessment

Mayflower Clinic uses GE Voluson Signature Expert, an advanced AI-enabled fetal ultrasound system that supports detailed fetal anatomy, growth, fluid, and Doppler assessment.

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Precise imaging

Clear fetal imaging helps assess kidneys, bladder, placenta, fetal anatomy, and movement even when fluid is reduced.

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Fluid assessment

Amniotic fluid pockets are measured carefully and interpreted with gestational age, fetal growth, and clinical history.

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Doppler support

Doppler assessment helps in selected high-risk cases where placental function or fetal growth restriction is suspected.

When to seek fetal medicine review

Consider specialist assessment if your report says low liquor

You can come for a fetal medicine scan or second opinion if any of the following are present.

Report-related reasons

  • AFI is low or deepest pocket is reduced
  • Fluid is reducing on serial scans
  • Low fluid with small baby or poor growth
  • Low fluid with abnormal Doppler
  • Low fluid with fetal kidney or bladder concern

Clinical reasons

  • Reduced fetal movements
  • Suspected leaking per vaginum
  • High blood pressure or pre-eclampsia concern
  • Previous pregnancy with IUGR, low fluid, or stillbirth
  • Need for delivery timing counselling with your obstetrician
Urgent note: If fetal movements are reduced, fluid leak is suspected, bleeding occurs, or you feel unwell, contact your treating obstetrician or emergency maternity unit immediately. Do not wait for a routine website appointment.
FAQs

Questions parents ask about low amniotic fluid

Is oligohydramnios dangerous?

It depends on severity, gestational age, fetal growth, Doppler findings, fetal movements, and the cause. Mild isolated low fluid near term is very different from severe early oligohydramnios. A fetal medicine assessment helps clarify risk.

Can drinking more water increase amniotic fluid?

Maternal hydration may help in some borderline situations, but it does not treat all causes. If low fluid is due to placental insufficiency, fetal kidney problems, or membrane leak, medical assessment is essential.

Do I need a full bladder for this scan?

Usually not in later pregnancy. For early pregnancy or special situations, the clinic may guide you before the appointment.

How long does the scan take?

Most assessments take about 20–40 minutes, depending on fetal position, gestational age, Doppler needs, and whether a detailed anomaly or growth evaluation is required.

Is the scan painful?

No. The scan is usually performed over the abdomen and is painless. You may feel gentle probe pressure during imaging.

What if low fluid is found with a small baby?

This combination may suggest fetal growth restriction or placental insufficiency. Dr. Kunda may advise serial growth scans, Doppler, fetal surveillance, obstetric review, and delivery timing discussion depending on the complete picture.

Can I come for a second opinion?

Yes. Please bring previous ultrasound reports, Doppler reports, blood pressure records, antenatal file, and any discharge or admission notes if available.

When will I get the report?

In most cases, the ultrasound findings are discussed after the scan and a written report is provided. Complex cases may require additional counselling or coordination with your obstetrician.

Need a low-fluid scan or second opinion?

Book an oligohydramnios assessment with Dr. Kunda Shahane at Mayflower Fetal Medicine & High-Risk Pregnancy Centre, Nagpur. Bring all previous reports for better correlation.

PCPNDT Act Notice

Mayflower Fetal Medicine & High-Risk Pregnancy Centre strictly complies with the Pre-Conception and Pre-Natal Diagnostic Techniques (Prohibition of Sex Selection) Act, 1994. Determination and disclosure of the sex of the foetus is strictly prohibited by law and is not performed at this centre.

All ultrasound and prenatal diagnostic services are used exclusively for lawful medical indications including fetal anatomy assessment, fetal wellbeing, fetal growth, Doppler evaluation, and diagnosis or monitoring of maternal-fetal conditions.

Medical Disclaimer: This page is for general patient education only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Please consult Dr. Kunda Shahane or your treating obstetrician for advice specific to your pregnancy.