Acrania

Yves RIO, MD*, Fabrice Cuillier, MD**

* Gynecologist, 97460 Saint-Paul, Ile de la Réunion, France. 
** Department of Gynecology, Félix Guyon Hospital, 97400 Saint-Denis, Ile de la Réunion, France. 

Case report: 

This was the fourth pregnancy of a nonconsanguinous couple. The first sonographic screening was abnormal at 8 weeks. We suspected acrania. At 10 weeks, by ultrasound, the fetus presented several anomalies : Absence of the skull and acrania (Image 1,2,3).

At 10 weeks and 2 days, cardiac activity was absent. We performed an embryoscopy and confirmed an acrania. We also observed rachischisis and a probable cleft lip. A curetage was done then. The karyotype could not be obtained after trophoblast biopsy. 

Image 1-3: 

Exencephaly_Cuillier_1
Exencephaly_Cuillier_2
Exencephaly_Cuillier_3

Video clip:  embryoscope

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