These aren't devil's horns. They're real!

Posted on Wednesday, April 15, 2009 11:56 AM PT

By Diane Mapes

AC/DC guitarist Angus Young may pretend his index fingers are devil’s horns in live concerts, but human beings have actually been known to sprout a horn or two.

Called cutaneous horns (cutaneous is Latin for “of the skin”), these growths occur when the surface of the skin thickens, usually in response to some type of disease.

Sometimes the diseased or damaged layer of skin can blister or become white and scaly, similar in appearance to a psoriasis outbreak. Or it can become as thick as the hide of an elephant or a rhinoceros.

Image: Body Odd

“The topmost part of the skin is the stratum corneum — it protects the body,” says Dr. Clay J. Cockerell, clinical professor of dermatology at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas. “But if the stratum corneum is damaged due to disease or something along those lines, then it can actually make a different kind of layer.”

The most famous case of cutaneous horns is possibly the so-called “tree man” of Indonesia. The “tree man” has an extremely rare genetic defect that, after exposure to the human papillomavirus (HPV), causes his skin to produce massive amounts of cutaneous horns. At least 13 pounds of these warts were removed from his body last year.

Often, the diseased skin can grow into the shape of a horn.

“Sometimes, especially if there’s a tumor beneath the skin’s surface, it can form a very thick cornified layer in an upward spine or spike,” says Cockerell.

Cutaneous horns may be disturbing to see, although they’re fairly uncommon. A retrospective study by the Royal Liverpool Hospital came up with only 643 cases worldwide between 1970 and 1989.

Click to see an image of a finger horn or a curvy head horn. (Warning: Images contain graphic photos. They're safe for work, but not for the squeamish.)

These skin horns are made of compacted keratin, the same type of material that comprises your fingernails, toenails and hair. Most often found on the parts of your body that are exposed to the sun and where skin cancer develops. About 30 percent of cutaneous horns sprout on the face or scalp, with 60 percent of the growths due to benign lesions. The rest are derived from malignant or premalignant epidermal lesions. Horns are equally prevalent in men and women, and are more common — and more malignant — in people between the ages of 60 and 75.

“Most commonly, we see these develop over a squamous cell carcinoma, but we also see horns overlying warts,” says Cockerell.

Since cutaneous horns develop atop various skin lesions — including cancerous skin, burn scars, warts and venereal warts — they can grow anywhere on the body. Cutaneous horns have been found on the head, scalp, nose, eyelid, ear, lip, chest, neck, shoulder, forearm, leg and hand, according to a 2004 study in the world Journal of Surgical Oncology.

There have even been cases of cutaneous horns on the penis, such as that of a 70-year-old Indian man who suffered multiple penile horns, according to a 2003 study in an Indian medical journal.

As with anything on the body, cutaneous horns come in all shapes and sizes. Some can be microscopic, others can become quite large.

“We’ve seen some that can be the size of a small pickle,” says Cockerell. “Others were about the size of a small banana.”

For example, in 2005, the journal of the Head and Neck Surgery Foundation reported the case of a 58-year-old Greek man with a giant cutaneous horn in front of his right ear. The horn, which had reportedly been growing for three years, reached the size of a finger before it was surgically removed.

Cutaneous horns caused by a tumor or cancer typically require surgery. Small lesions can be removed with liquid nitrogen or a topical medication.

In the past, horned humans were cause for awe, alarm and the inevitable sideshow attraction.

One of the earliest reports was in in 1588, involving an elderly Welsh woman by the name of Margaret Gryffith. Gryffith appeared on the stage in London as a “Miraculous and Monstrous” woman, out of whose forehead “there groweth a crooked Horne, of four ynches long.” According to Jan Bondeson, who documented the case in his book, “The Two-Headed Boy and Other Medical Marvels,” her head horn was such a popular draw that Queen Elizabeth’s Privy Council took time off from their preparations for the Spanish Armada to go see her.

Then there was a 16th-century Frenchman, Francois Trouvillou, who sported a large curved growth like a ram’s horn on his head. After he was expelled from his village for witchcraft, he made it to Paris where he became huge sensation on the stage.

More recently, in 1930, a Chinese farmer with a 14-inch long horn growing out of the back of his bald head was known as the Wang, the Human Unicorn.

If you suspect the odd protuberance growing out of your head or hand or genital area is a cutaneous horn, it’s a good idea to see a doctor right away.

“The horn is a red flag … it’s almost always a sign of an underlying growth of some kind,” says Cockerell. “In many cases, it’s cancer.”

Comments

Those pics are gross. I can't understand why these people didn't think "geez, there's something strange growing out of me... I think I should get this checked" as opposed to waiting like they did and letting it grow like that??? Yuck.
Yes, the pics are "gross", but consider that these people probably do not have access to proper health care, that is probably why they grew to the extent that they did.  
I only suppose that yes, they did realize that something was the matter. You have to understand that in Wang the Chinese farmer's time, there was no way to seek medical help other than to try traditional Chinese medicine. It's also likely that he did not feel any different and supposed that his abnormality was simply that, an abnormality. It didn't prove to be a handicap...so it's possible he just did not think he needed medical help. As for the "tree man", he did seek help; it wasn't his choice to remain as he is in his condition. Before you consider making insensitive comments about people and their medical conditions (no matter how extreme they are), you should consider that you do not know exactly the circumstances of their situation. I am appalled by your crude insensitivity.
I'd imagine most of them wanted to, but a lot of people don't have access to the medical services it takes to get something like that fixed.
My first thought would be cancer.  The most feared word !  And then try to get it removed before it turned into something like that.
Yes, it may be gross, but think. It seems that most of these are occurring in third world countries now where they don't have the mecical resources that we have in this nation or in our western culture. Also many of these happened hundreds of years ago and maybe further back than that when they didn't have the medical knowledge or experience that we have now. These people were just considered to be freaks. These people are victims of disease. It's just a little more visible than other diseases.
LMiller: let me plop you down in a Village in the middle of Indonesia or a remote part of China with no money, give you a job that makes the equivalent of about $20 per month, and you just go ahead and get yourself to a doctor/surgeon/hospital and get yourself some medical attention.  I'm sure it'll be a cinch.  If only those people would have thought of that!  They must be dumb.
Or maybe they just caould't afford to get treated because of their social status you piece of sh*t brat.
I'm sure that many of them would like to get these checked out, but may not have the money to do so.  An operation for something like this is probably not covered under insurance.  Many of these types of pictures seem to take place in countries that do not have the funds, medical knowledge or tools to be able to perform such a procedure.
LMiller - does it not occur to you from looking (especially at the woman) that these are people that are not exactly living in the lap of luxury? To suggust they "get it checked" is assine and shows a complete lack of critical thinking and ignorance on your part. Do you really think that everyone in the world has access to medical care? And if they do that they can afford it? Get a clue!
I was blessed with one of these horns on my lower eyelid.  I had to see a specialist to have it removed.  The removal was very,very painful, required stitches, and lost three complete eyelashes. (I was awake and only had a local shot) This thing grew at an alarming rate, as all doctors are booked for weeks in advance, it took me six weeks to get in to see the doctor to have it removed.  Thankfully it was not cancerous.
That's what I don't get - like how did the tree guy get that bad without either noticing it or trying to see a doctor?  Things shouldn't get that out of hand.
I have sympathy and feel sorry for those who are inflicted with problems such as these.I do not see anything humerous or entertaining by hearing and or seeing pictures of these people who are more often than not exploited by tabloids etc
The people who don't get those things checked out usually don't because they can't, not because they don't want to.  The "tree man" could not afford medical care.  He only got attention from his country once a doctor from another country took interest in him and the media got wind of it.  
Well, I don't think that they just decided not to have them checked out.  You know, there are billions of people in this world without the luxury of access to medical care (whether insured or uninsured)
Perhaps, LMiller, they had no health insurance like so many of us here in the good old USA. There are children right here in the states with birth disfigurements that are astounding and they can't get help unles somehow one of the few charitable hospitals like St. Judes or Shriners Hospital for crippled children. Thank God that there are places like them with dedicated staff. But they can't help everyone.
LMiller: You are probably one of the most ignorant people I have encountered in quite some time. If you did not notice, these people live in very small, insanely poor countries and have no money or means to "get this checked". Go back working your job that clearly overpays you that you get free health insurance from, and don't post anymore. You are clearly a spoiled, clueless brat.
Maybe they should move to America. They can have it taken care of for free!!!
I think I would have put a tournaquet on to kill it and have it fall off rather than letting it grow.  You can do that without health services.
TO ALL LUCKY AMERICANS;WE ARE SO LUCKY TO BE AMERICANS,THERE IS PROBOBLY ARE PEOPLE IN THE WORLD THAT HAVE WORSE CONDITIONS THAN THIS
Linda and LMiller, what part of not having access to medical attention or living in a poor, underdeveloped village in Indonesia is so hard for you to understand??? Are you so naive that you think the man with the "tree" growths could just hop in his 2009 Escalade and cruise around the corner to "County General" or whip out his cellphone to call up and see if "McSteamy" was free for a consultation? What medical attention he received was rudimentary at best, and was not advanced enough to deal with such an unusual and unprecedented problem. He did not have the money to get further attention and so he lived the rest of his life until recently secluded, until a doctor from a industrialized country that has advanced methods stepped in. Read the story. There are parts of this world that still aren't industrialized or developed, and I would have hoped that living in a country that IS we would all be educated enough to know that.
The "treeman" was deserted by his wife, is unable to work due to the growths on his body, and is living in poverty. He can't afford the treatment he needs to keep his condition under control. Not everyone has medical care.
So cool! Now every pierced, tattooed Goth Kid in America will want one (or two or three)....thanks for the wierd but whacky medical news!
I'm a paraplecic, for people that don't know, it means paralized from the waist down. A lot of people with deformaties or handicapes don't really care what others think as much as they care about trying to fit in. This world can be a cruel place. Many things happen to people, for those of you with opinions and negative thoughts, think about this, it only takes a car wreck a bump on the head or even struck by lighting. Then you might understand that people that are different only feel that way when they are reminded  of it.
To all those "why didn't they have it checked out" people: I guess they never figured to just whip out their Blue Cross-Blue Shield insurance card. Go figure.
These horns are awesome, I want one!  Where can I buy one of these?
I wonder what they taste like?
The treeman had tried to get help. These poor people, I feel for them. In some of these countries, doesn't a growth give you something of an inigma? Sometimes it is good, sometimes it is bad. Unfortunatly, these people do not have the same healthcare we do, or Britan, or Canada,ect. They have next to nothing.
One word for those that seem to think people WANT to suffer in life -- COMPASSION!  Good heavens, people!  Ignorance is, thankfully, a curable disease in this country -- made obvious by some of the unfeeling, insensative, short-sighted commentary.  I suggest fully THINKING about something before you go letting your fingers do the walking on the internet and let others know how much of your education you're NOT picking up on, LMiller.  These very cases are the reasons doctors and other medical personnel choose to work in third world countries!  To give those less fortunate the opportunity to find out what is truly wrong and, hopefully, do something about it that is a lasting reality in their culture and their part of the world.  Consider yourself lucky that you're not in that condition or circumstance and next time, THINK before typing!
My mom sprouted one "horn" on her because she kept banging it in the same place due to a broken spring in the trunk of her car.  It was a ganglian cyst, removed with a quick outpatient surgery...but we sure did tease her for it :)
I actually had one grow over an eyelash once, it sounded like clipping a fingernail when the doc clipped it.
These kind of things aren't limited to China or Indonesia.  I've worked in the slums of cities in Central America and seen real poverty (povertly that makes American poor look like they're rich) and people in despeartion.  They can't even imagine medical care - they struggle each day just to keep a roof (usually leaking) over their heads and a half-decent meal a day.  We don't know how good we have it!!
Remember, people in certain countries don't need to worry about healthcare. The live in a society where everyone takes care of one another and all are covered under insurance, unlike this great country where if you can't pay you die.....
My guess is that LMiller is a teen or pre-teen.  Obviously the people afflicted with these growths were from ancient days when the medical knowledge didn't exist to treat them, or as others have said, they are in third world countries where medical treatment is not available to them for one reason or another.
"He who knows nothing is closer to the truth than he whose mind is filled with falsehoods and errors"

While LMiller's comment may not have been the most sensitive or "P.C."  Consider the fact that maybe she/he did not think about the fact that these people may not have access to health care.  Maybe She/he was just reacting to the pictures and was shocked by them more then expected.  But you don't know the truth behind this story for sure either, unless you know some of these people personally.   Maybe having surgery  goes against their religious beliefs or perhaps they just feared being an outcast and labeled a freak.   Point is unless you have the absolute truth on the subject, there is no reason for name calling, elementary  language and putting people down.  There are easier ways to inform people of alternate theories.  
Yes, it's true.  Keith Olbermann has horns sprouting under his toupee. He puts cat nip on their tips every night so that his cat, 'precious perfect' gnaws at them in the hopes they will disappear.
god, some people really do live in a bubble
That initial comment at the top of the page is typical of the ethnocentrism from which the majority of westerners operate when confronted with realities imported from other cultures. Ignorance can be remedied with a bit of research, but the will to seek must first be present; unfortunately, a generation raised on high-fructose sugar drinks and additive-enhanced foodstuffs suffers from a cognitive deficit serving as an indictment of its willful ignorance. The great majority of people in the world live without recourse to medical care, dentists, psychiatrists, and all the other perks "civilzation" offer. They are the human race, in all their ugly, unwashed, wart-bearing beauty. Of course, that might strain your already chemically overtaxed brain so that you might stress out and...grow a horn!
This makes me Horny!
I wonder about the historical religious implications of horns growing out of the head. Did  this influence tales of "devils" in our distant past?
Wow!  Just when you think you've seen it all!
Quote from Linda in GA: "That's what I don't get - like how did the tree guy get that bad without either noticing it or trying to see a doctor?  Things shouldn't get that out of hand."

That's just it, like C. Mullen said, he couldn't afford the luxury of medical attention until the media got hold of his situation. Now he requires two surguries a year! What if you had to go thru that? Many others have said that most of the people in the world CAN'T AFFORD medical attention! Also, they may not have it available (think third world countries).
Those of us who have good health because of genes, good nutrition, and mothers who cared about us as we grew up really don't know how fortunate we are until we see someone with an affliction that we think is awful.  My mother always told me to "consider the source" when someone made an unkind comment about another person.  Thankfully, there are people in this world with kind hearts and giving natures and the ability to heal, or try to "make it right" for others who are not as fortunate.


Send a comment

PLEASE READ: All comments must be approved before appearing in the thread; time and space constraints prevent all comments from appearing. We will only approve comments that are directly related to the blog, use appropriate language and are not attacking the comments of others.

Message (please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):

Your name, city and state (John Doe, Seattle, Wash.): 

Your e-mail address (jdoe@msnbc.com):

Your website (it's okay if you don't have one):

Remember me? (We'll keep it private)

About the blog

Insights and ruminations on the strangeness of all things medical, pharmaceutical and biological.

Msnbc.com writers and editors will muse upon the wonderfully weird human body and the medical curiosities that make you go huh, ewww or ouch! Looking for informed, unhinged meditations on everything from dubious diseases to recipes for ersatz mucous? Well, this is the place.

If you have a question, e-mail The Body Odd.

Archives


Add this blog to your news reader