Ny Man 'Grows' Six Inches Through Surgery
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Ny Man 'Grows' Six Inches Through Surgery |
At five foot, six inches, Apotheosis was shorter compared to the average American male and incredibly unhappy about any of it.
So he did something other men who feel short may consider unthinkable: he opted for expensive, painful surgeries to create himself "grow" a complete of six inches.
"I realized that the world viewed me a certain way that i didn't look at myself for the reason that certain way, " said the 37-year-old New Yorker, who goes by the pseudonym "Apotheosis" in online forums and asked that "20/20" not use his real name. "I wanted just how I felt about myself and the way the world felt about me to be similar. "
Apotheosis is among a "growing" amount of men pursuing limb-lengthening procedures for cosmetic reasons.
Dr . Dror Paley, a renowned osteopathic surgeon at the Paley Institute at St. Mary's Infirmary in West Palm Beach, Fla., performed 650 leg-lengthening surgeries this past year.
Most of Paley's patients have severe deformities or dwarfism, but he also sees cosmetic patients.
"The majority who come for cosmetic limb lengthening have what we call, height dysphoria. They are unhappy with their height, " said Paley, adding that therapy has little influence on changing a patient's views. "It's one of the few psychologic-psychiatric disorders you could actually cure with the knife. "
That is correctly the key reason why Akash Shukla, 25, decided to undergo the procedure. At age 18, the brand new Jersey man was devastated to learn that his final height would be 4'11 ½.
"I felt like my short stature was sort of causing a void inside me- an emptiness in my heart, if you will, " he said.
And not individuals were encouraging.
"There are some people that have said, 'just accept what God gave you. But, for some reason, shape or form everyone is trying to improve what god gave them. If God gave children crooked teeth, they get braces, " said Shukla, who is now almost 5'2" thanks to the surgery.
But limb lengthening is certainly not like straightening teeth.
Just a few doctors, including Paley, perform the procedure in america.
Surgeons break the leg bone in two and implant a state-of-the-art telescopic rod in to the middle of the broken bones which then pulls the bone apart very slowly, about one millimeter a day.
New bone grows around it and tissues like the muscle, the nerves, the arteries, and the skin, regenerate as well.
At about $85, 000, the procedure is expensive and the process lengthy. It takes at least 90 days to perform it also it requires demanding and excruciating physical therapy.
Apotheosis is still in recovery and he does not desire to go public despite the fact that this is his second surgery. "I am still lengthening at this time and there could be further complications and I don't desire to discuss it successfully until it's been successful. "
But he is candid about his leg lengthening journey on www. makemetaller. org, an online forum for folks thinking about the procedure.
"I am not telling anyone they ought to do that surgery, but I am laying out my experiences and the risks that i have taken and the successes that i experienced and let people make their very own decision, " he said.
Many go to the site searching for suggestions about doctors, usually foreign, because the cost for the surgery could possibly be not even half as much overseas.
Apotheosis traveled to Germany to possess internal rods implanted and now he is the main one in charge of controlling the lengthening, twisting his legs backwards and forwards to extend the rod inside.
Despite the pain and financial burden, patients like Apotheosis say those few more inches of height could make a large difference.
"When I walk down the street someone different perceived differently by the world for the rest of my entire life, you understand, I am who I want to be now, " he said.
He chose the moniker Apotheosis, he said, because "it methods to become godlike -- end up being the most readily useful you will be. It is a Greek word. "
"And that's sort of what I want? And I am not attempting to be godlike; I am attempting to function as most readily useful me that i could be. "
Watch the entire story on "The Leading edge, " a "20/20" special, TONIGHT at 10 p. m. ET.