Lalit Patidar, an 18-year-old in India, was found to have 201.72 hairs per square centimeter, covering 95% of his face, ...
Last year, Spanish health chiefs warned that a popular hair-loss drug may be causing babies to suffer 'werewolf syndrome', leaving them blanketed in hair. Almost a dozen cases have now been ...
It's believed that Lalit Patidar is one of fewer than 50 people to experience hypertrichosis worldwide since the Middle Ages ...
After this case in Spain, the Centre found 10 more similar reports of “werewolf syndrome” in babies across Europe, all linked to minoxidil use. It can affect both women and men. The abnormal ...
The record was broken because he has an extremely rare condition called hypertrichosis. It is also known as werewolf syndrome. There have only been 50 documented cases worldwide. Not just in recent ...
Lalit Patidar has a rare condition called called hypertrichosis, or ‘werewolf syndrome’, causing him to grow excessive hair. The 18-year-old, whose face is 95% covered with hair, says there ...
Lalit Patidar has nearly 202 hairs per square centimetre on his face due to a rare condition called hypertrichosis, or “werewolf syndrome”. Despite facing stares from classmates as a child ...
Lalit Patidar earned the male version of the record after living with a rare hair growth condition called hypertrichosis, which is also known as "werewolf syndrome." The condition is believed to ...
Over 95 per cent of his face is covered in hair due to a rare medical condition called hypertrichosis, often referred to as ‘werewolf syndrome.' According to the Guinness World Records ...
Patidar, 18, was born with an extremely rare condition called hypertrichosis, known as werewolf syndrome, which causes excessive hair growth. Since the Middle Ages, only 50 cases have been ...
It is also known as werewolf syndrome. There have only been 50 documented cases worldwide. Not just in recent history but since the Middle Ages. Guinness officials called it a one-in-a-billion ...