A sharp pain surging across her chest and an ache creeping
up her neck, causing a debilitating migraine.
Kerisha Mark, from Beaumont, Texas feared they were the
symptoms of a heart attack or brain tumour.
But the then 39-year-old was not at risk of either life-threatening
conditions.
Instead doctors told her the pain was the result of her
breasts and a rare condition, gigantomastia.
Ms Mark had always had an exceptionally large chest. But by
her late 30s, her bust had grown to a staggering 36NNN.
The rapid growth was the result of the hormonal condition.
Gigantomastia is diagnosed when breast weight exceeds three
per cent of a person's body weight.
The enlargement can cause muscle pain, and over-stretching
of the skin envelope, which can lead to ulceration.
The condition usually affects one breast more than the
other, causing asymmetry.
It is thought the underlying cause of the condition is a
heightened sensitivity to female hormones prolactin, oestrogen and
progesterone.
For Ms Mark the condition resulted in pulled chest muscles,
severe back pain and emotional distress, the Washington Post reported.
'I could not run or jump or work out at all,' she said.
'I was very limited in a lot of things I could do.'
She estimated her breasts weighed around 15lbs each, and
said she had been forced to use duct tape to hold them in place.
Having considered surgery as an option for years, Ms Mark
made the decision to mark her 40th birthday by having treatment.
Eyewitness News cameras followed Ms Mark into the operating
theatre.
'I was like, happy birthday to me!' she said.
She recalled how her large breasts have hampered daily life
ever since she was young.
'My first time at boot camp, I did a jumping jack and my bra
snapped,' she told the cameras.
She added: 'I started to have really bad headaches. Women
and men want to touch them to see if they are real. It's real intimidating.'
Dr Franklin Rose, a plastic surgeon based in Houston,
performed the operation.
He told The Post he could not remember seeing a patient with
larger breasts in his 35-year career.
He said: 'The breasts really hung down to her hips and were
essentially like carrying around three basketballs at all times because they
were so large.
'When we went into the exam room - I don't know if I would
use this word 'shocking', but it was certainly startling to see breasts of that
magnitude.'
Dr Rose said he recruited a colleague to help with the
four-hour operation, where he removed 15lbs of breast tissue.
They were able to leave Ms Mark with a 'nice full' DD cup
bust.
He said if her condition had been left untreated it could
have developed into degenerative kyphosis, a condition causing a person's spine
to curve forward, forming a hump or hunchback.
Ms Mark said more than a month after the surgery, which took
place in October, she is planning to start exercising again, and is excited at
the prospect of a new wardrobe.
'The first time my best friend saw me, she cried,' Mark
said. 'When I stood up for the first time I felt so light.'
She also experienced emotions she didn't anticipate.
'After I got home I did cry. It was like I mourned the death
of them, it was like a divorce.
'My first thing on the agenda is to purchase a beautiful bra
and second is to buy a strapless dress,' she added.
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