Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

24 surgeries later, Bangladesh’s ‘tree man’ is back in hospital

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: A year ago, Abul Bajandar, a Bangladesh­i rickshaw-puller dubbed “tree-man” for the bark-like growths that once covered his body, appeared to have made a full recovery from the rare condition that has afflicted him for a decade.

But twelve months after doctors declared him all but cured following 24 surgeries, his hands are once again covered in the growths.

Surgeon Samanta Lal Sen, who last year hailed his cure as a milestone in medical history, now admits Bajandar’s case may be more complicate­d than first thought.

His patient, who has been unable to work for years and whose young family lives in the hospital, says he fears he will never be cured.

Bajandar suffers from epidermody­splasia verrucifor­mis, an extremely rare genetic condition known as “tree-man disease”.

Intrigued by his condition, doctors at the Dhaka Medical College Hospital treated him for free, surgically removing

DHAKA

more than 5 kg of growths from his hands and feet.

He has been there ever since with his wife and family, who live together in a small room in the hospital.

“We thought we had achieved (a cure). But now it seems to be a time-consuming case,” Sen told AFP.

“We will keep on investigat­ing to reach the ultimate success, though it’s tough to say how long it will take.”

This week Bajandar underwent his 25th surgery to remove some of the growths from his hands.

Fewer than half a dozen people worldwide have epidermody­splasia verrucifor­mis, according to Sen.

Last year the hospital treated a young girl suffering from the condition.

Doctors declared surgery to remove the growths a success, but her father later said they had grown back in even greater numbers. He withdrew her from treatment, saying he did not want to watch her grow up in a hospital ward. AFP

 ?? AFP ?? Abul Bajandar at the Dhaka Medical College Hospital.
AFP Abul Bajandar at the Dhaka Medical College Hospital.

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