i think this pic is beginnig edit??? or really got such things?? when i read the topic i tot the horns are standing upright..
NeonTetra
drank too much Kambing soup?
elementa
eee!!how come got such thing. Izzit born nature or grow by itself when she is grown up? ugh
wuming78
Originally posted by NeonTetra:
drank too much Kambing soup?
sandy
horny woman...
saintboy
Eeeew...lol ... looks like shit sticking out..forgive my crudeness..
PaJeRoMiNi Ver 1.0
I think i read somewhere before that this is a rare medical condition....but i forgot where liao...
Angel^_^
Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine by George M Gould and Walter L Pyle
Original Copyright 1896 by W.B. Saunders
Warren mentions a case under the care of Dubois, in a woman from whose forehead grew a horn six inches in diameter and six inches in height. It was hard at the summit and had a fetid odor. In 1696 there was an old woman in France who constantly shed long horns from her forehead, one of which was presented to the King. Bartholinus mentions a horn 12 inches long. Voigte cites the case of an old woman who had a horn branching into three portions, coming from her forehead. Sands speaks of a woman who had a horn 6 and three quarter inches long, growing from her head. There is an account of the extirpation of a horn nearly ten inches in length from the forehead of a woman of eighty-two. Bejau describes a woman of forty from whom he excised an excrescence resembling a ram's horn, growing from the left parietal region. It curved forward and nearly reached the corresponding tuberosity. It was eight cm. long, two cm. broad at the base, and 1 and a half cm. at the apex, and was quite mobile. It began to grow at the age of eleven and had constantly increased. Vidal presented before the Academie de Medecine in 1886 a twisted horn from the head of a woman. This excrescence was ten inches long, and at the time of presentation reproduction of it was taking place in the woman. There was a woman of seventy-five, living near York, who had a horny growth from the face which she broke off and which began to reproduce. Lall mentions a horn from the cheek ; Gregory reports one that measured 7 and a half inches long that was removed from the temple of a woman in Edinburgh; Chariere of Barnstaple saw a horn that measured seven inches growing from the nape of a woman's neck; Kameya Iwa speaks of a dermal horn of the auricle; Saxton of New York has excised several horns from the tympanic membrane of the ear; Noyes speaks of one from the eyelid; Bigelow mentions one from the chin; Minot C speaks of a horn from the lower lip, and Doran of one from the neck.