Prenatal ultrasonographic evidence of intracranial mass lesions genera
lly results in a diagnosis of primary glial or primitive neuroectoderm
al neoplasm. We describe two infants, one who was stillborn at 25 week
s' estimated gestational age and one term infant who was born live and
died shortly after birth with large intracranial space-occupying lesi
ons that exerted significant mass effect. At autopsy, large soft-tissu
e spheres of partially organized brain tissue containing neurons, astr
ocytes, oligodendroglia, ependyma, and choroid plexus were found adjac
ent to intact, fully formed cerebral hemispheres with normal brain ste
ms and cerebelli within the cranial cavity. We have termed these extra
cerebral heterotopias ''accessory brains.'' The telencephalic vesicles
arise as lateral outpouchings at the rostral end of the developing em
bryo during the 5th week of embryogenesis. These accessory brains may
arise embryologically from an accessory third evagination inferior to
the telencephalic vesicles.