Brothers bullied and beaten for having full-grown breasts now 'living a normal life' after surgery to remove their 'moobs'
A trio of brothers who grew breasts due to a rare genetic disorder are now
'living a normal life' after going under the knife.
The Ramírez brothers, from the Dominican Republic, said they
were 'extremely happy' they were no longer being bullied, beaten and ridiculed
for their 'moobs'.
Yeuri, 17, told local TV: 'It hurt a lot but now I feel
good. Now they can't make fun of us anymore.'
The plight of the siblings, which
some have described as a hoax, was highlighted when their desperate father
Felipe appealed for help, via the island's news programme Zona5, from
specialists.
His work as a food stall seller,
and the absence of the boys' mother who left when they were little, meant he
did not have enough money to pay for an operation.
His emotional plea was picked up by medics at the Marcelino Velez Santana Hospital, whose boss Dr Pedro Antonio Delgado agreed to pay for the operations.
After tests to see if Yeuri, his
11-year-old brother Gabriel and 12-year-old Daniu could undergo treatment, they
each went under the knife for two hours.
Medics:
Dr Elbi Morla (left) said the operation would be a key moment in the boy's
lives, while Dr Pedro Antonio Delgado (right) confirmed his hospital paid
entirely for the surgery |
Rare:
The condition affected the boys who are from the southern rural town of
Magueyal
After the
operation, for the condition called gynecomastia which affects males who have a
hormonal imbalance, Dr Elbi Morla told the show: 'In reality, this is a
key moment in their evolution.
'It was
something that was affecting them greatly.'
And a
grateful Felipe added: 'They are now normal men. They have had them taken off.
I never had the hope that this would happen.
'I never had
the money to do this. I'm so thankful to the press for helping.'
|
Bed
bound: Yeuri, 17, told local TV: 'It hurt a lot but now I feel good. Now they
can't make fun of us anymore'
Doctors said they will now monitor the boys and give them
medicine to block the female hormones they were producing.
And they revealed that the condition, affecting the boys
from the southern rural town of Magueyal, was genetic.
It was most likely due to a hormonal anomaly passed on
through generations of the area’s small congenital gene pool.
Source: Daily mail
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