A Chinese woman, named Lingalinga of the province of Geangsi province in South East China, is demanding justice after the process of destructive breast growth, leaving her severely disabled. According to a report in South China Morning PostMs. Lingalling spent around Rs 2.8 crore (2.4 million yuan) on breast transplantation and follow -up treatments, only to find out that implants included DNA from cattle and mousse.
The process, which was marketed as an innovative growth technique, was first brought to his attention by the owner of a local beauty salon in 2017. A Beijing Clinic that prepared the said method claimed to remove and cultivate the patient’s collagen, before he resumes it in the breasts to make “self-existent, self-use” results without any rejection.
Influenced by the pitch, Ms. Lingling, along with the owner of the salon, visited the national capital for the process, where the head surgeon, Bai Jin assured her that the entire operation was simple and safe.
However, immediately after surgery, Ms. Lingling began to experience pain in the chest area, complaining about a foreign object sensation in her breasts.
To get rid of pain, Ms. Lingling passed through nine separate cosmetic processes in the later six years. From transplantation insertion to repair, Ms. Lingalinga had several hospital trips with expenditure of more than Rs 2.8 crore.
By 2023, Lingling discovered leakage and deformation in her breast implants. “I had two lumps on my chest that reached my stomach,” he said.
In 2024, he decided to go under the knife to the Shanghai Clinic, with the implants removed and tested. It was during the process that doctors found the content of foreign injections, causing him physical damage.
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Search for justice
Previous patients had performed breast enlargement surgery in Beijing Clinic, they also tested their transplants and found DNA from camels, bats and gorillas in them.
Ms. Lingling tried to get compensation for her ordinance, but it was found that both the clinic and beauty salons closed the shop.
The report revealed, “Beijing, a medical cosmetic clinic, was canceled his business license where he underwent surgery and was involved in 398 medical malpractices controversies. Its lead surgeon, Bai, were also unregistered with medical officials.”
Earlier this month, Ms. Lingling reported the case to the Beijing Municipal Health Commission. But due to the closure of the two institutions, his legal battle in search of justice has hit a road.