“…The diagnosis of ACC is predominantly made during childhood, since the majority of patients show delayed development, are mentally retarded and suffer from psychiatric and phy-sical ailments [6,[20][21][22]. In contrast, an isolated and especially a symptomless ACC was considered to be an even rarer condition, diagnosed postmortem [12,20,22] or incidentally by computed tomography (CT) [6,9] or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) [1,2,4]. For example, 31 of 68 cases with developmental anomalies of the brain were diagnosed in a large MRI unit during 20 months as also having abnormalities of the corpus callosum (CC).…”