Na wa ooooo, some disease dey oooooo, thank God for Africa oooo.Brazilian villager Djalma Jardin had just one eye which he
was unable to close and he spent his days indoors due to a rare genetic
disorder.His village, Araras in the state of Sao Paolo resembles a ghost town because
most residents suffer from Xeroderma Pigmentosum (XP), which means their skin
is unable to repair damage caused by ultraviolet light.
Of the 800 people in the village, 600 are affected by XP. Of those, 20 have full-blown symptoms and are susceptible to an aggressive form of skin cancer.
Mr Jardin's face was ravaged by the disease, leaving him with just one eye. He
slept with a plaster
over it because damage to his eyelid meant he couldn't close
it.Of the 800 people in the village, 600 are affected by XP. Of those, 20 have full-blown symptoms and are susceptible to an aggressive form of skin cancer.
'If I go out I feel the sun burning me,' he said. 'I go to
bed and wake up the next day with a small spot, and then in a couple of days
it's growing quickly, like the one I got in my eye which never stopped growing.
It's an awful disease, terrible.'
Following the interview, Mr Jardin's condition
worsened and the illness sadly cost him his life.His family has already lost another relative to the disorder and another of Mr Jardin's brothers and his sister Claudia are also affected by it.
Deide with Gleice
|
Residents who suffer XP talk during a meeting in the
village. Their umbrellas, which protect them from the sun, surround them
|
Dairy farmer Deide has also lost much of his face to the
incurable condition. He said:
'I had surgery to remove the palate and the right
jawbone. Without the prosthesis I couldn't talk.'
Store owner Gleice Machado was keen to find out what was
causing the epidemic, after seeing so many of those affected coming through her
doors.
'I had no idea what it was and why they were disfigured,'
she said. 'Some believed it was a sexually transmitted disease. Others said
they believed this was a punishment from God.'
She raised awareness of the condition through the local
press and the story was picked up by the national media.
Sao Paulo-based genetics biologist Dr Carlos Menck
recognised the condition and was keen to know why it was so rampant in the
village.
He said:
He said:
'We went to the area and tried to identify genetic mutations
affecting the patients.
'Until not long ago, people believed it was a contagious disease, but it's an inherited disease.'
'Until not long ago, people believed it was a contagious disease, but it's an inherited disease.'
After running tests on all of the villagers, Dr Menck and
his team discovered 600 of the 800 villagers were carrying a recessive XP gene.
It could be traced back to the families of three Portuguese settlers.
Dermatologist Sulamita Chaibub said:
'In Araras there is a concentration of people with the
faulty gene who keep marrying each other, so the gene becomes dominant and the
disease appears.'
There is no cure for XP but doctors have now warned
villagers to stay out of the sun completely - and it is hoped this advice will
save many lives.
Dr Menck said:
'It is not possible to cure them immediately. But I hope
perhaps in the future, maybe in 20 or 30 years time.'
The story of Araras village features in a new series of Body Bizarre at 9pm on Thursday August 20 on TLC
SOurce Daily Mail Uk
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