Thursday, September 22, 2011

Boy, 5, endures horn implants so surgeons can remove birthmark

Doctors have treated a young boy with a large birthmark on his face... by implanting horns in his forehead. George Ashman, 5, was born with a bright red blemish on his forehead and his mother Karen, 33, feared he would endure a lifetime of bullying. So when he was four he underwent a surgical procedure to stretch the 'normal' skin on his forehead so the birthmark could be removed and covered with the new unblemished tissue. Doctors inserted two tissue expanders under the skin, which gradually inflated so they looked like two perfect devil's horns.


Photo from SWNS.

After four months the implants were removed and the blemish was cut out, allowing the new skin to be stitched together - leaving just a small scar on George's forehead. Karen from Radstock, Somerset, said: 'When I first saw the implants in place I was speechless. They were larger than I expected - and placed on either side of his tiny head looked like horns. My cute, angel-faced baby looked like the devil. But I'm really proud of the strength he has shown through all of this. He has never let it hold him back.' George was born in 2006 with a haemangioma birthmark - made up of bright, soft lumps of abnormal blood vessels.

Karen said: 'When he was born immediately my mind raced forward ten years. George would be the picked-on kid with no friends, no girlfriend.' In 2009 George was referred to Great Ormond Street Hospital in London to begin the procedure to remove the growth. Last year doctors inserted two small inflatable sacks under his hair line at either side of his forehead. Over four months, they gradually inflated with natural bodily fluid until they had stretched the skin enough to reach over the birthmark when it was removed. During the four months he had the horns, George was subjected to cruel taunts from passers-by.


Photos from SWNS.

Karen - who is separated from George's father Lee, said: 'School kids hanging around on street corners were laughing and pointing. Once, a teenage lad came right up to us to have a good look. He uttered a cry of disgust. I was tearful and emotional. I had no problem loving my son but others' reactions were hard to deal with. I felt like everyone was against us.' George went under the knife in April this year to remove the birthmark and have his 'new' skin stretched across in its place. He has only a small scar where the blemish used to be and has now started school with his friends.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

You have to blame the upbringing of those kids.

Anonymous said...

It's great he can now live a normal life, but seriously...? His mother really expects him to have a girlfriend at 10 years old?

Anonymous said...

The kid is 5... she said 10 yrs from now which would make him 15. I think 15 is a good age to have a girlfriend!

Anonymous said...

Or a boyfriend.

Anonymous said...

or a transexual he/she bond pairing.

Anonymous said...

or the love between a man and his horse

Anonymous said...

"Karen said: 'When he was born immediately my mind raced forward ten years. George would be the picked-on kid with no friends, no girlfriend.' "
That would make him 10! :)