Her affliction means that moving can be agonising and even the simplest of tasks, such as combing her hair, can prove extremely difficult.
"My hands are so heavy I can barely lift them to comb or shampoo my hair, it's very difficult," she said.......(continue)
"Getting dressed is also very difficult and painful.
"Some doctors said the only solution was to cut off my hands if I wished to walk around freely.
"But I don't want to do that."
Ms Samaksamam, from Thailand's Surin Province, was raised in a rural village where there were no medical experts to help her.
Ashamed by her gigantic limbs, she spent the first 20 years of her life as a recluse because she could not face going out in public.
This meant that she never went to school and never married.
She was eventually forced to come out of hiding at the age of 20 to help provide for her elderly parents - who could no longer work - by taking over the family grocery shop.
My hands are so heavy I can barely lift them to comb or shampoo my hair, it's very difficult
My hands are so heavy I can barely lift them to comb or shampoo my hair, it's very difficult
As news spread about her oversized hands, she started undergoing operations at the age of 25 to try and reduce the swelling.
Unfortunately, the surgery just made her condition worse.
Ms Samaksamam, who now lives with her sister and her niece, said: "During the surgery they didn't remove any tissue, just opened it up, opened up my arm to check it.
"They said it wasn't bad tissue just really thick fat in there, but they didn't remove anything for fear of damaging the nerves.
"After five months my wrists began to hurt.
"I felt so much pain. I couldn't sleep.
"If I held something it would fall out of my hands because I couldn't feel them."
Two further operations later, and she was left in a crippling condition.
Source : Express.co
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