Executive Summary
A viability scan, also known as an early pregnancy reassurance scan or early pregnancy ultrasound, is a specialized examination performed between 6-8 weeks of pregnancy to confirm that the pregnancy is developing normally and the fetus is alive. This scan assesses four critical markers of early pregnancy success: the gestational sac, yolk sac, fetal pole, and cardiac activity. The detection of a fetal heartbeat is the most important indicator of pregnancy viability, with a normal heart rate of 110-160 beats per minute at 6-8 weeks. Understanding what defines a viable pregnancy, what heart rate ranges are normal, and when repeat scans are necessary helps expectant parents make informed decisions and manage the natural anxiety of early pregnancy.
What is a Viability Scan?
A viability scan is an early pregnancy ultrasound examination specifically designed to confirm that a pregnancy is developing normally and the embryo is alive. Unlike a dating scan, which focuses on establishing gestational age, the viability scan prioritizes confirming pregnancy success through the detection of cardiac activity and assessment of developmental markers.
Primary objectives:
- Confirm the presence of a fetal heartbeat
- Assess gestational sac characteristics
- Evaluate yolk sac appearance and size
- Measure fetal pole and Crown-Rump Length (CRL)
- Rule out ectopic pregnancy
- Identify signs of early pregnancy complications
The viability scan is typically recommended for:
- Women with previous pregnancy loss
- Patients with infertility or fertility treatment
- Early pregnancy bleeding or abdominal pain
- Uncertain pregnancy dates
- Maternal anxiety requiring reassurance
When is the Best Time for a Viability Scan?
The optimal timing for a viability scan is 6-8 weeks gestation, counting from the first day of the last menstrual period. This timing represents the earliest point at which cardiac activity can be reliably detected while still providing valuable information about pregnancy progression.
Recommended Timing by Scenario
| Clinical Scenario | Optimal Timing | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| Routine viability check | 7-8 weeks | Heartbeat definitively detectable |
| Previous pregnancy loss | 6-7 weeks | Earlier reassurance |
| Bleeding or pain | Immediate scan | Rule out complications |
| IVF pregnancy | 6.5-7 weeks | Precise dating known |
| Uncertain dates | 7-9 weeks | Ensure detectable heartbeat |
Why Timing Matters
Before 6 weeks:
- Cardiac activity may not yet be present
- Fetal pole may not be visible
- Inconclusive results may cause unnecessary anxiety
- Repeat scan often required
6-7 weeks:
- Cardiac activity typically detectable
- All viability markers should be visible
- Early reassurance possible
- Optimal window for high-risk pregnancies
7-8 weeks:
- Cardiac activity consistently present in viable pregnancies
- Clear visualization of all structures
- Reduced chance of inconclusive results
- Ideal timing for most patients
After 10 weeks:
- Embryo is now called a fetus
- Viability already established
- Transition to routine prenatal care
- Focus shifts to anatomy and growth
What Defines Pregnancy Viability?
Pregnancy viability is confirmed through the systematic assessment of four key ultrasound markers. Each marker must meet specific criteria to be considered normal.
The Four Viability Markers
1. Gestational Sac
- Must be present within the uterine cavity
- Should be round or oval in shape
- Normal size: 10-25 mm mean diameter at 6-8 weeks
- Should have smooth, well-defined margins
- Should demonstrate appropriate growth over time
2. Yolk Sac
- Should be visible within the gestational sac
- Normal size: 3-6 mm (maximum 6 mm)
- Should appear as a bright, circular structure
- Critical for early embryonic nutrition
- Disappears by 12 weeks as placenta takes over
3. Fetal Pole
- Embryo should be visible adjacent to yolk sac
- Crown-Rump Length (CRL) measurable
- Normal CRL at 7 weeks: 8-12 mm
- Should show linear echogenic structure
- Demonstrates embryonic development
4. Cardiac Activity
- Most critical marker of viability
- Visible as flickering motion
- Detectable via M-mode or Doppler
- Should be present when CRL > 7 mm
- Normal rate: 110-160 bpm at 6-8 weeks
Viability Criteria by Gestational Age
| Gestational Age | Expected Findings | Viability Confirmed If... |
|---|---|---|
| 5 weeks | Gestational sac visible | Intrauterine location confirmed |
| 6 weeks | Yolk sac + fetal pole present | All structures present |
| 6.5 weeks | Cardiac activity detectable | Heartbeat present |
| 7 weeks | Clear fetal pole + heartbeat | Normal heart rate >110 bpm |
| 8 weeks | Fetal movement visible | Heart rate 140-170 bpm |
Fetal Heart Rate: The Key Viability Marker
The detection of fetal cardiac activity is the most important indicator of pregnancy viability. The heart rate provides valuable information about fetal well-being and can predict pregnancy outcome.
Normal Heart Rate Ranges by Week
| Gestational Age | Normal Range (bpm) | Mean Rate | Slow Heart Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| 6 weeks | 90-115 | 103 | <90 bpm |
| 6.5 weeks | 100-130 | 115 | <100 bpm |
| 7 weeks | 110-150 | 126 | <110 bpm |
| 7.5 weeks | 120-160 | 136 | <120 bpm |
| 8 weeks | 140-170 | 149 | <140 bpm |
Heart Rate Patterns and Prognosis
Normal heart rate progression:
- Increases approximately 10-15 bpm per week
- Peaks around 9 weeks (160-180 bpm)
- Gradually decreases to 120-160 bpm by 14 weeks
- Stabilizes in second trimester
Prognostic significance:
| Heart Rate Findings | Pregnancy Outcome |
|---|---|
| Normal rate at 6-7 weeks | 95-98% chance of continuing pregnancy |
| Slow heart rate (<100 bpm) | Increased miscarriage risk (30-50%) |
| Very slow rate (<80 bpm) | High miscarriage risk (80-90%) |
| Absent cardiac activity when expected | Pregnancy loss confirmed |
Bradycardia (slow heart rate) considerations:
- Transient bradycardia may occur briefly during development
- Persistent bradycardia carries poorer prognosis
- Repeat scanning in 1 week recommended for borderline cases
- Counseling provided about increased miscarriage risk
Understanding hCG Levels and Viability
Human Chorionic Gonadotropin (hCG) is the pregnancy hormone detected in blood and urine tests. Serial hCG measurements combined with ultrasound findings provide comprehensive pregnancy assessment.
hCG Patterns in Viable Pregnancy
Normal hCG progression:
- Doubles approximately every 48 hours in early pregnancy
- Reaches 1,000-2,000 mIU/mL when cardiac activity appears
- Peaks around 10 weeks (100,000-200,000 mIU/mL)
- Gradually decreases in second trimester
hCG Correlation with Ultrasound Findings
| hCG Level (mIU/mL) | Expected Ultrasound Findings |
|---|---|
| 1,000-2,000 | Gestational sac visible |
| 2,000-5,000 | Yolk sac visible |
| 5,000-10,000 | Fetal pole visible |
| 10,000+ | Cardiac activity detectable |
Discordant hCG and Ultrasound Findings
hCG rising normally, no sac seen:
- Possible ectopic pregnancy
- May be too early (repeat hCG and scan in 48 hours)
- Clinical correlation essential
hCG rising slowly, normal scan:
- Possible failing pregnancy
- Close monitoring required
- Repeat ultrasound in 1 week
hCG plateaued or decreasing:
- Indicates pregnancy loss
- Ultrasound confirms findings
- Discuss management options
Repeat Scans: When and Why
Not all viability scans provide definitive answers immediately. Several scenarios require follow-up imaging to confirm pregnancy progression or diagnose pregnancy failure.
Indications for Repeat Scanning
1. Pregnancy of Uncertain Viability
When no definitive evidence of viability or failure is seen:
- Gestational sac present but no fetal pole
- Fetal pole present but no cardiac activity
- Measurements at lower limits of normal
Recommended follow-up: Repeat scan in 7-10 days
2. Suspended or Delayed Pregnancy
When development appears slower than expected:
- Sac size appropriate but fetal pole small
- Cardiac activity present but rate is slow
- Mild discrepancy between dates and measurements
Recommended follow-up: Repeat scan in 1 week
3. Previous Pregnancy Loss
Women with history of miscarriage:
- Early reassurance scanning (6-7 weeks)
- Serial scans to confirm continued growth
- Emotional support and counseling
Expected Interval Growth
| Time Interval | Expected CRL Increase | Expected Heart Rate Change |
|---|---|---|
| 7 days | 3-5 mm | +10-15 bpm |
| 10 days | 5-7 mm | +15-20 bpm |
| 14 days | 8-10 mm | +20-30 bpm |
Factors Affecting Miscarriage Risk
Several factors influence the risk of pregnancy loss, even after cardiac activity is detected. Understanding these risks helps patients and providers make appropriate decisions about monitoring and care.
Risk Factors After Heartbeat Detected
| Risk Factor | Miscarriage Rate After Heartbeat |
|---|---|
| General population | 2-4% |
| Age 35-39 | 5-8% |
| Age 40+ | 10-15% |
| Previous miscarriage | 5-10% |
| Recurrent miscarriage (2+) | 15-20% |
- Previous stillbirth
- Pre-existing diabetes
- Thyroid disorders
- Autoimmune conditions
Reducing modifiable risks:
- Avoid alcohol, tobacco, and illicit drugs
- Limit caffeine to <200 mg/day
- Maintain healthy diet and weight gain
- Manage chronic medical conditions
- Avoid certain medications and environmental toxins
What Happens If Viability Is Not Confirmed
When a viability scan demonstrates findings concerning for pregnancy failure, sensitive communication and clear follow-up planning are essential.
Criteria for Diagnosing Pregnancy Failure
Definite pregnancy loss (no follow-up needed):
- CRL ≥7 mm with no cardiac activity
- Gestational sac ≥25 mm with no embryo
- Absence of embryo on scan 2+ weeks after sac seen
- Absence of cardiac activity 2+ weeks after embryo seen
Pregnancy of uncertain viability (follow-up needed):
- Gestational sac present but no embryo (size <25 mm)
- Embryo present with no cardiac activity (CRL <7 mm)
- Subchorionic hematoma (bleeding around sac)
- Discordant growth between sac and embryo
Management Options
Expectant management (waiting for natural miscarriage):
- Suitable for many patients
- Allows natural passage of pregnancy tissue
- Avoids surgical intervention
- May take 2-4 weeks to complete
- Emotional support essential
Medical management (medication to induce miscarriage):
- Uses misoprostol (sometimes with mifepristone)
- Faster than expectant management
- Can be done at home in many cases
- Pain and bleeding expected
- Follow-up scan to confirm completion
Surgical management (D&C procedure):
- Uterine aspiration under anesthesia
- Immediate completion
- Useful for desired rapid resolution
- Small risks of complications
- Tissue can be sent for analysis
Emotional Considerations
Grief and loss:
- Acknowledge the significance of early pregnancy loss
- Validate emotions regardless of gestational age
- Provide resources for support
- Allow adequate recovery time before trying again
Future pregnancy planning:
- Most couples conceive again successfully
- No increased risk with next pregnancy typically
- Consider evaluation after 2+ consecutive losses
- Preconception counseling recommended
Preparation and What to Expect
Before the Scan
Preparation guidelines:
- Full bladder: Required for abdominal approach before 10 weeks
- Drink 32 oz water 1 hour before appointment
- Don't empty bladder before scan
- Transvaginal preparation: Empty bladder preferred
- More comfortable with empty bladder
- Better visualization with transvaginal approach
What to bring:
- Insurance information
- Previous pregnancy records
- List of medications
- Information about LMP and any fertility treatments
During the Scan
What to expect:
- Duration: 15-30 minutes
- Approach: Transvaginal typically before 8 weeks
- Discomfort: Mild pressure, fullness
- Images: Sonographer may show screen during exam
- Results: Preliminary findings shared immediately
Transvaginal procedure details:
- Performed in private setting
- Feet in stirrups, draped for modesty
- Thin probe covered with protective sheath
- Inserted into vagina
- Gently moved to obtain images
- Removed when exam complete
After the Scan
Immediate results:
- Sonographer often shares findings during exam
- Official report from radiologist within 24-48 hours
- Follow-up scheduled if needed
- Next steps discussed before leaving
Emotional responses:
- Relief when viability confirmed
- Anxiety waiting for repeat scans
- Grief if pregnancy loss diagnosed
- Vulnerability during examination
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the viability scan always accurate?
The viability scan is highly accurate but not infallible. Accuracy depends on:
- Gestational age: More accurate at 7-8 weeks than 5-6 weeks
- Equipment quality: Higher resolution machines detect findings earlier
- Sonographer experience: Expertise improves detection rates
- Fetal position: Optimal positioning improves visualization
Accuracy rates:
- Cardiac activity detection: 95-98% at 7 weeks when present
- Pregnancy loss diagnosis: 99% when criteria met
- False positives (diagnosing loss when pregnancy is viable): <1%
Can I see the heartbeat on the screen?
Most facilities allow patients to view the ultrasound screen during the examination. You may see:
- Gestational sac: Dark circle within uterus
- Yolk sac: Small bright circle inside sac
- Fetal pole: Small white line/oval structure
- Cardiac activity: Flickering movement in fetal pole area
The sonographer will point out these structures and explain what you're seeing. However, not all findings may be immediately obvious to untrained observers.
What if I'm measuring behind dates?
Being behind expected dates doesn't necessarily indicate a problem. Considerations:
- Delayed ovulation: May have ovulated later than day 14
- Uncertain dates: LMP may not accurately reflect conception date
- Early lag: May catch up with repeat scan
- Pregnancy failure: Possible if no growth on repeat scan
Management approach:
- Repeat ultrasound in 7-10 days
- Expected CRL increase of 3-5 mm per week
- Correlation with hCG levels if needed
- Counseling regarding possible outcomes
How often should viability be checked?
For most healthy pregnancies with confirmed viability:
- One scan at 7-8 weeks is sufficient
- No additional scans until nuchal translucency (11-14 weeks) unless concerning symptoms develop
Additional monitoring indicated for:
- Previous pregnancy loss (may have 2-3 early scans)
- Bleeding or pain (scan as needed)
- Fertility treatments (earlier and more frequent monitoring)
- Medical complications (individualized schedule)
Does a strong heartbeat guarantee successful pregnancy?
While detecting a heartbeat is very reassuring, it doesn't guarantee pregnancy success. After cardiac activity detected:
- General population: 2-4% still miscarry
- Age 35-39: 5-8% miscarriage rate
- Age 40+: 10-15% miscarriage rate
- Recurrent miscarriage: 15-20% miscarriage rate
Reasons for loss after heartbeat:
- Chromosomal abnormalities
- Anatomic uterine abnormalities
- Hormone deficiencies
- Infection
- Unknown causes
Key Takeaways
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Viability scans at 6-8 weeks confirm pregnancy success by detecting cardiac activity, with 95-98% accuracy when performed at optimal timing.
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Normal fetal heart rate at 6-8 weeks ranges from 110-160 bpm, increasing approximately 10-15 bpm per week until peaking around 9 weeks.
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Four markers confirm viability: gestational sac, yolk sac, fetal pole, and cardiac activity must all be present and appropriately developed.
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hCG levels correlate with ultrasound findings—when discordant, they may indicate ectopic pregnancy, failing pregnancy, or dating error.
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Repeat scans are often necessary when initial findings are inconclusive, with 7-10 day intervals allowing for definitive assessment.
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Bradycardia (slow heart rate) carries increased miscarriage risk—50% risk at <100 bpm, 80-90% risk at <80 bpm.
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Miscarriage risk decreases significantly after cardiac activity detected, but age, medical history, and previous losses affect ongoing risk.
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Transvaginal ultrasound before 8 weeks provides superior visualization of early pregnancy structures compared to abdominal ultrasound.
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Pregnancy failure can be definitively diagnosed using established criteria, avoiding unnecessary waiting when CRL ≥7 mm with no heartbeat.
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Emotional support is essential regardless of outcome—acknowledging anxiety, validating grief, and providing resources for coping.
Medical Disclaimer: This content is for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult your healthcare provider for guidance specific to your pregnancy situation.