Foetal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) plays an increasingly important role in the diagnosis of foetal abnormalities. Over the years, we have successfully applied bi-parametric MRI (bp-MRI) to the following obstetric conditions: (1) neurologic vascular diseases; (2) assessment of lung parenchyma maturation; (3) renal pathologies, such as polycystic kidney, suspected renal infarction, unilateral or bilateral renal agenesis; (4) placental pathologies, as twin-twin transfusion syndrome or placenta accreta; (5) benignant and malignant congenital tumours or cysts of the liver, such as haemangioendothelioma, hepatoblastoma or metastatic neuroblastoma, of the kidney (e.g. mesoblastic nephroma) and of the retroperitoneum, such as teratoma. The information derived from bp-MRI, and concerned with water motions in different tissues, improved the morphologic details provided by conventional foetal MRI. It has the potential to increase the value of MRI in the assessment of a wide range of foetal pathologies, particularly in renal diseases, allowing an adequate management decision and therapy.
Keywords: Foetus; bi-parametric MRI (bp-MRI); diffusion-weighted MRI (DW-MRI); magnetic resonance imaging (MRI); obstetrics; placenta accreta.