
Infected
mosquito bites from more than two decades ago left a Cambodian man's leg five
times its normal size due to an untreatable parasitic disease.
Twenty-seven year-old Bong Thet from Cambodia who once dreamed of becoming a footballer is now forced to drag the painful leg along the ground in Kampong Chhnang province due to his condition.
According to
Bong, the tumour developed from small wounds on his foot when he was just
six-years-old, and at that time, he said his parents ignored because they
thought he injured himself while playing outside.
He said small
lumps grew around his foot and completely covered his leg by the time he
reached 12-years-old.
Due to his
inability to afford the medical treatment in the poverty-stricken country, his
condition worsened over the years.
Bong, who had
to stop going to school because it was difficult for him to walk long distances
later met good Samaritans who offered to pay for his treatment earlier this
month.
Businesswoman
Dana Try gave 10,000,000 Cambodia Riel (around £1,900) for Bong's medical
expenses and he was able to visit a hospital for the first time.
After
conducting a blood check-up, the doctors found that he has Lymphatic
filariasis, a parasitic disease caused by thread-like worms.
The doctors
said he contracted the parasites through mosquito bites which he scratched,
resulting to the wounds.
According to
medical officials, the parasitic disease is one of the leading causes of
disability in the world, but there is no known vaccine or cure for the disease
yet.
When Bong
learned that the disease is incurable, he was disheartened but he was still
thankful to people who contributed for his checkup.
'This will
make my life easier and knowing that there are people who care for me makes me
feel happy,' he said. 'I am so grateful for them to helping. The money will pay
for medicine and food.


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