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Babies gone wild
Published on August 31, 2007 By Body-Philosophy In Health & Medicine
Anyone who watches the Discovery Health channel knows that nature likes to throw us a lot of genetic curveballs: Siamese twins, extra appendages, chimeras, hermaphrodites...you name it. But you haven't seen anything yet. The people in this article have some of the most startling, unimaginable birth defects the world has ever seen. Suddenly that annoying birthmark of yours doesn't look so bad.

"Wolf Girl"

She may look more like a furry animal than a little girl, but Thailand's Supatra "Nat" Sasuphan (dubbed "Wolf Girl") in fact has Ambras Syndrome (also known as congenital hypertrichosis), which causes excessive hair growth over the face and body. The Daily Mail reports that only 40 people worldwide have been diagnosed with this unusual condition.

"The Little Mermaid"

Lots of little girls dream about being a mermaid just like Ariel. But for Peruvian baby Milagros Cerron, being born with fused, mermaid-style legs was a nightmare. The precious tot was born with a condition called sirenomelia, more commonly known as mermaidism. According to Channel4.com, the disorder strikes one in every 70,000-100,000 babies; those affected usually succumb to severe health defects and Milagros is only one of two known survivors. Dubbed "The Little Mermaid," she made headlines when doctors surgically separated her legs, and the San Francisco Gate reports that three-year-old Milagros took her first unaided steps earlier this year.


Tiffany Yorks

Like Milagros Cerron, Tiffany Yorks was also born with sirenomelia, fused legs that resemble a mermaid's tail. According to "Inside Edition," Tiffany is the first and oldest known survivor of the condition, though she has had her share of related ailments, including kidney and heart defects. Nineteen-year-old Tiffany has undergone more than 30 operations, and though her legs are now separate, knee ailments have left her in a wheelchair. Still, she hasn't forgotten her "mermaid" roots, telling the TV program that "When I'm under the water and I'm swimming I just feel free like there's no crutches, no wheelchair, no doctors, no needles, it's just me and the water."

"Cyclops Baby"

In a story straight out of Greek mythology, an Indian woman last year gave birth to a baby girl born with a single eye in the middle of the forehead-an extremely rare condition known as cyclopia. The baby was also born without a nose, and her brain was squeezed into only one hemisphere. According to Wired, doctors speculate that the severe birth defects were potentially caused by an experimental drug called Cyclopamine, which is used to fight cancer. The baby's mother had experienced fertility problems and may have been given the medicine-which gets its name from the one-eyed lambs that were born after a flock of sheep feasted on the toxin found within wild corn lily-as part of her treatment. Cyclopia can also arise when a mother has significantly low cholesterol or diabetes, Wired says.


"Lobster Baby"

Peruvian infant Moises Chavez was dubbed "Lobster Baby" when he was born with four claw-like limbs that bend around his body-a rare condition known as arthrogryposis. According to TheAge.com.au, about one in every 3,000 U.S. births features one limb suffering from this condition; that Chavez has it in all four is extremely unusual.

"Dark-haired Moises, who weighs 2.5kg and is 33cm long, cries and reacts to sound but his leg bones are bent at a 90-degree angle from his body, while his hands are distorted outward as his tiny elbows hug his chest," TheAge.com.au reports.

Surgeons were planning to operate on Moises's arms and legs to correct the problem.

Check the link to see more, along with pictures!

Comments
on Aug 31, 2007
I'm guessing you're not a parent...I just can't see how anyone with children could get entertainment out of this sort of morbidity. I'm glad in the USA we've got such fantastic prenatal care available, which surely minimizes a lot of these sad birth defects.
on Aug 31, 2007
...I just can't see how anyone with children could get entertainment out of this sort of morbidity


AngelaMarie88, we are in no way getting entertainment on birth defects we're merely bringing them to light so people can become more informed. There are all sorts of birth defects that strike people of all ages and ignoring them is not the best option.
on Aug 31, 2007
I'm guessing you're not a parent...I just can't see how anyone with children could get entertainment out of this sort of morbidity.

I'm with Angela Marie. This stuff is not worth clicking through -- it's too disturbing. With a headline like "The world's wildest birth defects!" you're adding freak-show entertainment value to a human tragedy.

But thanks for "bringing them to light"! What a valuable public service you render. You really shouldn't.
on Sep 03, 2007
Heh, I like it.

I watch shows about this stuff on Discovery Health all the time. It's fascinating.

on Sep 03, 2007
There are all sorts of birth defects that strike people of all ages and ignoring them is not the best option.


Umm, no.

Birth defects strike people of ONE age. That's by definition!