“…[1] This disorder manifests in the head, dural, cerebral cortex, and spinal column, with a horizontal migration inside the cortex, 4 th ventricle, or cerebellum through the posterior spinal canal, together with pons and forth ventricle expansion, probably due to a small posterior fossa. [2,3] Differential diagnoses include spinal tumors, CM-I, and encephalocele. Other disorders to consider are 4th ventricular cell tumor, Lhermitte-Duclos sickness, rhombencephalon synapsis, and tectocerebellar dysgraphia-associated posterior encephalocele.…”