<P>The most frequently asked questions that confront the fetal medicine trainee/expert on a daily basis are ¿Is the finding real or merely an artifact?¿ and ¿Is the diagnosis correct?¿. However, to be able to find the description of an abnormal ultrasound finding in a textbook, one generally has to search by the definite diagnosis, which has not been done as yet.</P><P></P><P>This uneasy feeling was the first factor that directed the layout of <B>Ultrasound of Congenital Fetal Anomalies: Differential Diagnosis and Prognostic Indicators, Second Edition</B>. Copiously illustrated, the book displays fetal anomalies by scanning view and descriptions of all major ultrasound planes, detailing what can be considered a normal view and what cannot. </P><P></P><B><P>See What¿s New in the Second Edition:</P><UL></B><P><LI>Early detection of fetal anomalies (1214 weeks)</LI><LI>Ultrasound in fetal infections and in twins</LI><LI>The nuchal translucency issue, the newest intracranial translucency a