I lived in a very small town growing up, and these girls lived in the next small town over. Their car had extremely heavily tinted windows, and if the girls had to leave the house for any reason during the day, they’d have to cover every bit of skin surface, or they’d develop blisters and such, a really severe reaction. They would go to parks to play in the middle of the night.
That’s xeroderma pigmentosum, IIRC. I once briefly met a young woman with the condition.
Yes, that’s what I mean. She was physically identical to a child of about six months old. She simply… never grew up. Very, very strange. The parents had actually had two daughters after her birth who had aged normally and were then regular children while their older sister remained trapped in babyhood.
Well lycanthropy has no known cases, but that is just because they havn’t caught me yet. <snarl>
Wow, someone mentioned xeroderma pigmentosum. I did my grad work on a yeast gene whose human ortholog (when mutant) caused the disease.
Anyway Chastain86 took my answer, so I’ll also suggest
chronic harmonius matrimonium.
Back to being serius, I would bet, but have no data to back up, that there are one off diseases that are close to unique, i.e. only one person has it or ever will. This starts to conjur up the question of, what exactly is the definition of a disease though…
I can’t get your link to pull up. Anyone else having the same problem?