2-D, 3-D, and 4-D Ultrasound and Gender-Determination Packages at Baby's First Photos (Up to 60% Off)
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2-D, 3-D, and 4-D ultrasound sessions that let you listen to your baby’s heartbeat; gender determination guaranteed
Choose from Three Options
$45 for early 2-D gender-determination package ($109 value) * First ultrasound done at 13 weeks: 10-minute 2-D ultrasound * Second ultrasound done at 14–16 weeks for gender confirmation; includes sneak peek of your baby in 4-D * Both sessions will be recorded on a DVD set to music for you to take home after your second visit * Five black and white 2-D photos
$65 for a platinum 3-D/4-D package ($159 value) * 15-minute 4-D ultrasound session recorded on DVD, set to music * Eight black and white 3-D photos * Eight high-resolution 3-D color photos * CD with all high-resolution 3-D color photos for printing, emailing, or uploading to the internet
$99 for a Watch Me Grow 3-D/4-D package with two visits ($249 value)
Watch Me Grow package: first visit recommended between 14–26 weeks and includes: * 15–20-minute 4-D ultrasound session recorded on DVD set to music, plus gender determination * Heartbeat recorded and put inside a teddy bear * Eight black and white 3-D photos * Eight high-resolution 3-D color photos * CD with all 2-D and 3-D photos for printing, emailing, or uploading to the internet
Watch Me Grow package: second visit recommended between 27–34 weeks and includes: * 20-minute ultrasound session recorded on DVD set to music * 10 black and white 3-D photos * 12 high-resolution 3-D color photos * CD with all 2-D and 3-D color photos for printing, emailing, or uploading to the internet
3D and 4D Ultrasounds: Seeing Babies Like a Bat
Though ultrasound is used as a diagnostic tool today, it was considered a therapy when it first appeared in medicine in the 1920s. Read on to learn how today’s 3D and 4D ultrasounds work.
Ultrasound machines are complex pieces of equipment, but the basic principle is so simple a bat can use it. Send out high-pitched sound signals (so high-pitched humans can’t hear them, in fact), and listen for them to bounce back. The time it takes for the sound to return tells you how close you are to another object, and sending dozens of these signals per second gives you a pretty good picture of the contours of the environment ahead of you and which bugs are juiciest. In the case of an ultrasound machine, these calculations typically map a 2D picture of a growing fetus in the womb. A 3D ultrasound takes this idea a step further, sending ultrasonic waves from a variety of angles around the body to provide a significantly more detailed picture. Adding the element of time results in a moving 3D image, often called a 4D ultrasound. Both 3D and 4D ultrasounds are elective procedures, most commonly used to show what a baby looks like and to identify its gender. Though ultrasonic technology is used as a diagnostic tool today, it was considered a therapy when it first appeared in medicine in the 1920s, using much more intense ultrasonic energy to apply controlled heat to tissues deep within the body. However, in 1955, Professor Ian Donald of Glasgow University’s Department of Midwifery began to test its application to the diagnosis of tumors, creating a stir in the medical community when he identified a large but operable ovarian cyst in a patient who had been misdiagnosed with inoperable cancer of the stomach. In 1959 he discovered that the ultrasonic waves could provide images of fetuses as well, allowing doctors to study pregnancy at all stages, diagnose any complications, and help name the baby by seeing which celebrity it looks most like.
Need To Know Info
About Baby's First Photos
There's nothing like seeing your baby for the first time. The licensed sonographers at Baby's First Photos aim to make that initial glimpse as special as possible, using 3D and 4D ultrasound imaging technology to peek in at growing children. Expectant mothers are welcome to bring up to 10 friends and family members to their appointments, and can purchase photographs and DVDs of their ultrasounds.