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As demand for illegal silicone injections grows, so do deaths

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Claudia Aderotimi, 20, read about Windslowe’s services online, according to charging documents, and flew to the United States in 2011 for the procedure. She paid Windslowe $1,800 for injections to her buttocks and hips. The chest pains started immediately, prosecutors said.

Aderotimi died days later.

Windslowe was already in jail when charged with Aderotimi’s death. Police had arrested Windslowe at a pumping party, where they found a line of women waiting to be injected.

Silicone has been a central part of plastic surgery since the 1960s, when it was first shaped into implants and injected freely into cheeks, breasts and hips. Medicine has since shown that silicone can migrate. The Food and Drug Administration banned direct injections of silicone in 1992.

“The body recognizes microscopically that silicone doesn’t belong there,” Roth said. “When you inject things, they don’t stay in one place.”

The buttocks have a high blood-vessel count. Silicone injected there has a higher likelihood of entering the bloodstream, hurtling resin particles throughout the body. In the lungs, silicone can cause major artery blockage. In the brain, strokes. Everywhere else, tumors.

Doctors can try to remove silicone particles, Coz said, but there’s no magnet or vacuum to catch every piece.

For transgender men, risking the procedure is often a result of frustration, said Tobin of the National Center for Transgender Equality. Patients who pay thousands of dollars for cosmetic surgery and hormone therapy, and sometimes expect immediate or dramatic results. Procedures are not always covered by health insurance.

“Transgender people can suffer real distress,” Tobin said. “They’re distraught about their appearance corresponding with their mental image of themselves.”

Shatarka Nuby was not transgender. The mother of one girl just wanted fuller curves. She paid Morris thousands of dollars for cup after cup of silicone — in all, 10 rounds of injections, police said. Her buttocks and hips swelled. Sometimes, after the needle slid out, she ran downstairs to her grandmother to show off her new body.

Last November, Nuby wrote to the Florida Department of Health. She was worried, she said. Her skin was turning hard and black.

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