“…Hemivertebra is commonly associated with other skeletal anomalies [10], diastematomyelia [36], cardiac, urogenital, and gastrointestinal tract anomalies [8], and some syndromes, including Jarcho-Levin syndrome, Klippel-Fiel syndrome, VATER syndrome (vertebral anomalies, imperforate anus, tracheo-esophageal fistula, renal anomalies), VACTERL syndrome (VATER, cardiac and limb anomalies), OEIS (omphalocele, urinary bladder exstrophy, imperforate anus, and spinal anomalies), the Potter sequence, and spina bifida [11,35]. The most relevant form of spina bifida is myelomeningocele with the unfused neural processes of the lumbosacral spine, allowing the spinal cord to protrude through an opening [37,38]. Furthermore, detailed knowledge of the growth of vertebral ossification centers in the fetal period may be helpful in the prenatal detection of skeletal dysplasias (osteochondrodysplasias) resulting in a delay in appearance of ossification centers and poor mineralization, which is typical of osteogenesis imperfecta type II [12,39], achondrogenesis [40], thanatophoric dysplasia type I [12], and hypophosphatasia [41].…”