Gastroschisis, a ventral body wall defect, is a continuing challenge and concern to researchers, clinicians, and epidemiologists seeking to identify its cause(s) and pathogenesis. Concern has been renewed in recent years because, unlike most other birth defects, rates of gastroschisis are reportedly increasing in many developing countries. No tenable explanation or specific causes have been identified for this trend. Rates of gastroschisis arre particularly high among pregnancies of very young women. Such an intriguing association, not observed to this degree with other birth defects, mat affordclues to the defect's cause. Understanding the causes of gastroschisis may provide insight to the defect's origin. In pursuing such casual studies, it would be helpful to understand the embryogenesis of gastroschisis. To date, four main embryologic hypotheses have been proposed: (1) Failure of mesoderm to form in the body wall; (2) Rupture of the amnion around the umbilical ring with subsequent herniation of bowel; (3) Abnormal involution of the right umbilical vein leading to weakening of the body wall and gut herniation; and (4) Disruption of the right vitelline (yolk sac) artery with sudsequent body wall damage and gut herniation. Although based on embryological phenemena, these hypotheses do not provide an adequate explanation for how gastroschisis would occur. Therefore, we propose an alternative hypothesis, based on well-described embryonic events. Significantly, we propose that abnormal folding of the body wall results in a ventral body wall defect through which the gut herniates, leading to the clinical presentation of gastroschisis. This hypothesis potentially explains the origin of gastroschisis as well as that of other developmental defects of the ventral wall. (c) 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc.