I went in for a genetic screening appt. yesterday. Was excited to see my baby again but otherwise didn't think much of this sonogram, didn't bring my boyfriend, etc. Well I was totally shocked when she asked if I wanted to know her "educated guess" about what baby is. Of course I said yes and she said it looks like a girl to her, because of the way baby's urethra is pointing. I'm not taking this as fact, of course, but I had a strong feeling it was a girl anyway, so it's hard not to become attached to the idea that its a girl.
I feel like I always hear that they never want to make a prediction this early- did anyone else get this at their regular appt.? I actually thought I might prefer a boy, but now that she said girl I want it to be true, lol.
Re: Sonographer made an "educated guess" about sex at 12 weeks
DD #1 3/26/13
Mo/Mo twins MMC 3/31/14
DD #2 3/31/15
DD #3 8/25/16
I cannot stress this enough... it is a 50/50 guess either way. Their odds are good no matter what they say. On my first BMB, two women were told the wrong sex at their elective ultrasounds that were done during the actual time frame you should be able to distinguish the difference. And a woman I know IRL was told at her anantomy scan she was having a girl, and found out when he was born that he was actually a boy. These were all recent occurrences. Like in the last two years.
Nothing is definite until you get genetic screening or see a penis or vagina when they are born.
My DD never moved much on ultrasounds. We always laughed about how stubborn she already was. She still is.
But if I can get a job of guessing.. when there's only 2 options, sign me up!
First-trimester determination of fetal gender by ultrasound.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To assess the accuracy of fetal sex determination at 11-14 weeks of gestation.
METHODS: Fetal gender assessment by ultrasound was prospectively carried out in 172 singleton pregnancies at 11-14 weeks of gestation immediately before chorionic villus sampling for karyotyping. The genital region was examined in a midsagittal plane and the fetal gender was assigned as male if the angle of the genital tubercle to a horizontal line through the lumbosacral skin surface was greater than 30 degrees and female when the genital tubercle was parallel or convergent (less than 30 degrees) to the horizontal line.
RESULTS: The accuracy of sex determination increased with gestation from 70.3% at 11 weeks, to 98.7% at 12 weeks and 100% at 13 weeks. In the male fetuses, there was a significant increase in the angle of the genital tubercle from the horizontal with crown-rump length. Male fetuses were wrongly assigned as female in 56% of cases at 11 weeks, 3% at 12 weeks and 0% at 13 weeks. In contrast, only 5% of the female fetuses at 11 weeks were incorrectly assigned as male and this false-positive rate was 0% at 12 and 13 weeks.
100% accuracy at 13 weeks (and close to 99% at 12 weeks) seems a lot better than an 'educated guess' to me!!!
Sebastian 3-11-14
Simon 5-2-15
Baby #3 Due 9-29-16
She showed us everything from the brain to the spine, to the fingers. Then bam, she was looking at the legs and looked at me in disbelief and said, you're finding out the sex, aren't you? I told her yes and her eyes flicked to the screen, you could CLEARLY see a little dooker. I even asked her if it was at ALL possible that it could be the umbilical cord and she said "No, that's a boy"...
I could see where they could misinterpret for a girl, as their testicles don't drop that early (so i've been told).. But you cant take away what is clearly there. The little peach was hung like a horse. I was in extreme disbelief, but it was definitely there.