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Limb-lengthening surgery patient who hit 6-foot-1 plans to undergo second procedureĀ to grow 3 more inchesĀ 

Hugo Ramirez, something of a Dwayne ā€œThe Rockā€ Johnson look-alike, has high aspirations.

Ramirez, who underwent painful leg-lengthening surgery to shoot up from 5 feet 9 inches to over 6 feet tall, is already planning to go under the knife again to grow three more inches.

He is ready to throw down $80,000 on a second cosmetic procedure to reach 6 feet 4 although following the first surgery, he had to relearn how to walk.

Ramirez is reportedly eager to try out new technology rolled out by Dr. Kevin Debiparshad, who runs LimbplastX Institute, and operates on clients from all over the world as the popularity of the leg-lengthening surgery continues to grow.

Hugo Ramirez – a patient of Las Vegas orthopedist Dr. Kevin Debiparshad – had a limb-lengthening surgery in 2023. Limbplastx Institute

He was 5 feet 9, the average height for a man, when he first walked into the clinic in early 2023.

“When you’re (5-foot-9), you still have to fight to get to where you have to be at. I mean, I had to earn my respect. Guys who are six-foot tall, I don’t even know how they get their positions in life. It’s probably because they’re tall,” patient Hugo Ramirez told KSNV.

The surgery required numerous sacrifices to go the distance.

He told the station he had to lose a chunk of weight, slimming down from 215 pounds to 197 through a gastric sleeve procedure. Then following the limb-lengthening surgery, he had to re-teach himself how to walk.

“What hurt the worst was learning how to walk all over again, muscle atrophy,ā€ Ramirez, who noted he is occasionally confused with Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, told KSNV. ā€œThat was the brutal part about the surgery was the muscle atrophy. It was the worst.ā€

Debiparshad has been in business for years, and can help stretch limbs by up to six inches.

The surgery can be painful, but to many clients it is worth the extra few inches of height. Limbplastx Institute

In 2020, he said he used a ā€œpainful deviceā€ to get the job done.

The device is inserted into the upper or lower leg and then the patient would use a remote control that triggers the device to stretch the bone incrementally.

Patients from South America, Europe, Canada and about a dozen states flocked to Las Vegas in the last month, where LimbpastX is located, to gain a few inches, the Harvard-trained doc noted.

Debiparshad told KSNV over the weekend there is new technology that could make recovery more seamless.

Ramirez is going to get another surgery in hopes of growing three more inches. Hugo Ramirez

ā€œThere’s a fourth generation of the implant called precise max that has recently come out. It is a more fortified implant. It allows for increased weight-bearing capacity, so it will allow patients to actually be able to mobilize and walk right after surgery,” Debiparshad told the station.

Ramirez plans to take advantage of the new mechanism to grow another few inches in the coming months.

“I have everything. I don’t need anything else. But the height has always been something I’ve, I’ve always looked at the people that are taller than me,ā€ Ramirez said. ā€œI’ve always looked up to them.ā€