When Sachita Shah sent her cardiologist brother an ultrasound of her patientâs heart, he was very confused. The heart was huge, and the left ventricle incredibly muscular. His confusion was warranted, as the ultrasound was not of a human heart. It belonged to another primateâa gorilla. Shah, emergency physician and VP of Global Health at medical equipment manufacturer Butterfly Network, tells Popular Science that if she had shown an ultrasound of a gorilla fetus to a radiologist, they would have assumed it was a human baby.Â
Shah is on the gorilla care team currently looking after Jamani and Olympia, two western lowland gorillas (Gorilla gorilla gorilla) mothers at Woodland Park Zoo in Seattle, Washington. Jamani gave birth on Monday May 18, and Olympia is expected to deliver her new baby imminently. Shah and her colleaguesâs work involves conducting ultrasounds of Jamani and Olympiaâs baby bumpâthough now probably just Olympiaâsâto keep an eye on the babyâs growth and position.Â
âWe got a really pretty baby face,â Shah says, speaking of the ultrasounds. âWe could see nose and lips and fetal breathing movements and heartbeat and drinking fluid, opening mouth and swallowing. For all intents and purposes, it was very much the same [as a human baby].âÂ
The endangered gorilla mothers were trained to take part in the exams and procedures conducted by the gorilla care team, and they could choose whether to participate or not. The gorillas put their bellies against the edge of the enclosure for the scan (and received snacks), where there is a small opening through which the care team can reach through with the ultrasound probe.Â
As such, the zoo needed a small and portable imaging device. Thatâs where Butterfly Network and their all-in-one ultrasound probe came in.Â
âWhen you think of an ultrasound, you might think of a big cart with lots of different probesâa different probe if you wanted to do a pregnancy scan, or a heart scan, or a pediatric scan might have a tiny probe,â Shah says.Â
Instead, the Butterfly probe they use at Woodland Park Zoo is a handheld ultrasound that plugs into a smart phone. It is around as big as an electric shaver, and it functions with a number of different softwares for either veterinarian or human health use. Notably, an app allows the team to use it for different types of scansâfrom a pregnant gorilla to a childâs lungsâthat would traditionally require distinct probes and machines.Â

Shah and her colleagues also used the Butterfly ultrasound device to scan the heart of Nadaya, the silverback gorilla father of both babies. In fact, the heart ultrasound Shah sent to her brother belonged to Nadaya. They used human software for that scan, even though their vet software is optimized for fur. Fortunately, Nadayaâs chest isnât very furry.Â
Shah, who has gone through a pregnancy herself, was most moved by working with the gorilla mothers.Â
âWe could tell the babyâs head had dropped and we thought, âoh man, she must be so uncomfortable.â And she was waddling and walking a little differently. I was like, âoh, I remember that, girl.â It was just amazing to remember that weâre all connected in that way,â she says.Â
Western lowland gorillas are critically endangered, so babies are always excellent news. We will share updates from the Woodland Park Zoo about Olympiaâs pregnancy sometime soon.Â
The post Pregnant gorillas undergo ultrasounds and the results might look familiar appeared first on Popular Science.
