Polymelia

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Polymelia
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Radiograph of a human child with polymelia
Classification and external resources
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Patient UK Polymelia
[[[d:Lua error in Module:Wikidata at line 863: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).|edit on Wikidata]]]

Polymelia (from Greek πολυ- = "many" plus μέλος (plural μέλεα) = "limb") is a birth defect involving limbs (a type of dysmelia), in which the affected individual has more than the usual number of limbs. In humans and most land-dwelling animals, this means having five or more limbs. The extra limb is most commonly shrunken and/or deformed.

Sometimes an embryo started as conjoined twins, but one twin degenerated completely except for one or more limbs, which end up attached to the other twin.

Sometimes small extra legs between the normal legs are caused by the body axis forking in the dipygus condition.

Notable cases

In humans

File:Female child with polymelia.jpg
A six-month old child with an extra leg
  • In the summer of 2005, a baby girl named Destiny was born with a fully formed extra leg in Detroit. This was the result of a conjoined twin scenario.
  • In March 2006, a baby boy identified only as Jie-jie was born in Shanghai with a fully formed third arm: he had two full-sized left arms, one ventral to the other. This is the only documented case of a child born with a fully formed supernumerary arm. It is an example of an extra limb on a normal body axis.[1]
  • In July 2007 a child was born with four legs at the Lebowakgomo hospital outside Polokwane (South Africa)
  • On November 6, 2007, doctors at Bangalore's Sparsh Hospital in Bangalore, India successfully completed surgery on a 2-year-old girl named Lakshmi Tatma who was born with 4 arms and 4 legs; but this was not true polymelia but a case of ischiopagus Siamese twinning where one twin's head had disappeared during development.
  • Frank Lentini had a third leg.
A grown steer with five legs.

In other animals

Piglet with dipygus at Ukrainian National Chernobyl Museum in Kiev
  • A four-legged chicken was born at Brendle Farms in Somerset, Pennsylvania, in 2005.[2] The story was carried on the major TV network news programs and USAToday. The bird was found living normally among the rest of the chickens after 18 months. She was adopted and named Henrietta by the farm owner's 13-year-old daughter, Ashley, who refuses to sell the chicken.[3] The second (hind) legs are fully formed but non-functional.
  • Four-legged ducks are occasionally hatched, such as 'Stumpy', an individual born in February 2007 on a farm in Hampshire, England. See also [2].
  • Frogs in the USA sometimes are affected by polymelia when attacked in the tadpole stage by the Ribeiroia parasite.
  • A puppy, known as Lilly, was recently born in the United States[4] with a fully formed fifth leg jutting out between her hind legs. She was initially set to be sold to a freak show, but was instead bought by a dog lover who had the leg removed.

In mythology

Many mythological creatures like dragons, winged horses, and griffins have six limbs: four legs and two wings. The dragon's science is discussed in Dragons: A Fantasy Made Real.

In Greek Mythology, the Hekatonkheires were said to each have one hundred hands. The Gegenees were a race of giants with six arms.

Sleipnir, Odin's horse in Norse mythology, has eight normal horse legs, and is usually depicted with limbs twinned at the shoulder or hip.

Several Hindu deities are depicted with multiple arms and sometimes also multiple legs.

In popular culture

  • Edward Albee's stage play The Man Who Had Three Arms tells the story of a fictional individual who was normal at birth but eventually sprouted a third functional arm, protruding from between his shoulder blades. After several years of living with three arms, the extra limb was reabsorbed into his body and the man became physically normal again. In Albee's play, the title character is extremely angry that we (the audience) seem to be much more interested in the period of his life when he had three arms, rather than his normal life before and after that interval.
  • Monty Python's Flying Circus performed a skit about a man with three buttocks. He believes that he has been invited to be interviewed on television because he is a nice person, and is dismayed to learn that he has only been invited because the interviewer is curious about his unusual condition.
  • The Dark Backward is a 1991 comedy film directed and written by Adam Rifkin, which features Judd Nelson as an unfunny garbage man who pursues a stand-up comedy career. When the "comedian" grows a third arm out of his back, he becomes an overnight hit.
  • Justice, the main antagonist in the cartoon Afro Samurai, has a fully formed arm protruding from his right shoulder.
  • In the cartoon series Avatar: The Last Airbender, Aang owns a six-legged flying bison.
  • Spiral, villain in the X-Men stories of Marvel Comics, has six arms.
  • A 6-armed Spider-Man frequently appears as an alternate reality incarnation of the character, and is sometimes referred to as "Polymelian".
  • In the Mortal Kombat series, the Shokan is a race of humanoids known to have four arms.
  • Ibid: A Life is a fictional biography of Jonathan Blashette, a man with three legs.

See also

References

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  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. [1] MSNBC video of Henrietta
  4. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links