According to People's Daily, local doctors are also saying the baby, named Honghong, has an extreme case of polydactyly, and that surgery - even if they could afford it would be difficult. The surgery could cost hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Honghong's condition came to his parents' shock because his mother has polydactyly too, (she has 12 fingers and 12 toes) and therefore had gone for numerous pre-natal scans.
The scans, reportedly done in hospitals in Shenzhen, China, which included an advanced four-dimensional ultrasound, all turned out negative, as doctors reassured her the baby would have the regular number of fingers and toes.
Polydactyly is not considered a rare genetic disorder, and affects a reported 1 in 1,000 kids according to medical journals.
Photo credit: ZHOU MIN/IMAGINECHINA
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