The exact development of craniopagus parasiticus is not well known. However, it is known that the underdeveloped twin is a
parasitic twin. Parasitic twins are known to occur
in utero when
monozygotic twins start to develop as an embryo, but the embryo fails to completely split. When this happens, one embryo will dominate development, while the other's development is severely altered. The key difference between a parasitic twin and
conjoined twins is that in parasitic twins, one twin, the
parasite, stops development during
gestation, whereas the other twin, the autosite, develops completely. In normal
monozygotic twin development, one egg is fertilized by a single
sperm. The egg will then completely split into two, normally at the two-cell stage. If the egg splits in the early
blastocyst stage, two inner cell masses will be present, eventually leading to the twins sharing the same
chorion and
placenta, but with separate
amnions. However, the egg can split into two, but still have one blastocyst. This will lead to one
inner cell mass and one blastocyst. Then, as the twins develop, they will share the same placenta, chorion, and amnion. This is thought to be the most likely reason why conjoined twins occur, ==Diagnosis==