Key Differences on Prenatal Ultrasound
When the fetal skull contour appears abnormal on early ultrasound,
two diagnoses are commonly considered:
Although these conditions are closely related,
they are not identical.
Understanding their differences is essential in prenatal imaging.
1️⃣ Basic Concept
Acrania
- Absence of the fetal calvarium (skull bones)
- Brain tissue is present but unprotected
- Considered an early developmental stage
Anencephaly
- Absence of the skull bones and most cerebral tissue
- Represents a more advanced stage of neural tube defect
- Incompatible with life
In many cases:
Acrania progresses to anencephaly over time.
2️⃣ Skull Appearance on Ultrasound
The first key question is:
Is the calvarial bone visible?
- In acrania, the skull bones are absent,
but irregular brain tissue can still be seen.
- In anencephaly, there is severe absence of cerebral structures
and the cranial vault is completely absent.
Both lack skull bones,
but the overall head morphology differs.
3️⃣ Presence of Brain Tissue
This is the most important distinguishing feature.
Acrania:
- Disorganized but identifiable brain tissue
- Exposed neural tissue without calvarial protection
Anencephaly:
- Minimal or absent cerebral hemispheres
- Only rudimentary tissue may remain
In short:
Acrania = brain present, skull absent
Anencephaly = brain largely absent, skull absent
4️⃣ Facial Features
- Acrania
- Facial structures relatively preserved
- Head size may still appear maintained early on
- Anencephaly
- “Frog-eye” appearance due to absence of cranial vault
- Prominent orbits
5️⃣ Timing and Progression
- Acrania is typically diagnosed in very early pregnancy.
- Over time, exposed brain tissue degenerates.
- This progression results in anencephaly.
Thus:
Acrania is often considered a precursor stage
of anencephaly.
6️⃣ Prognosis
Despite the technical distinction,
both conditions share the same outcome:
- Severe neural tube defect
- Not compatible with life
The difference is developmental stage,
not prognosis.
Quick Comparison Table
| Feature | Acrania | Anencephaly |
| Skull bones | Absent | Absent |
| Brain tissue | Present (exposed) | Mostly absent |
| Stage | Early stage | Final stage |
| Facial appearance | Preserved | Frog-eye appearance |
| Prognosis | Lethal | Lethal |
Key Takeaways
- Acrania and anencephaly lie on a developmental spectrum.
- The key distinction is the presence of brain tissue.
- Acrania often progresses to anencephaly.
- Both are severe neural tube defects with identical prognosis.
- Early prenatal ultrasound allows timely diagnosis.
If you’d like, I can also prepare:
- Neural Tube Defects: Early Embryologic Mechanism (English version)
- How to Differentiate Acrania from Exencephaly
- First Trimester Ultrasound Approach to Cranial Abnormalities
Your CNS section is becoming very strong —
this English post can even bring international traffic.