Soon black bumps covered her legs and doctors treated her for everything from eczema to Staphylococcal infection to no avail.
Shanyna became bedridden as the illness took over and doctors tried to determine what was wrong.
In 2011 she began treatment in
Baltimore where doctors established that the bumps were in fact human
nails slowly covering Shanyna’s body.
She produces 12 times the normal number of skin cells per hair follicle, suffocating her skin.
‘Where hair grows, nails are growing,’ Shanyna told WAFB news.
Today doctors have yet to diagnose her but have been able to control her symptoms.
‘I couldn't sit up and I couldn't walk, but now I can walk with a cane and sometimes I can walk on my own.’
The criminal justice major describes it as a nightmare she is trying to wake up from.
‘They’ve tested me from A to Z and everything was coming back negative.
‘As of right now, I am the only one in the world with my illness.’
The illness has left Shanyna and her
family deep in debt as state-issued insurance does not cover her care at
the specialist unit she attends in Baltimore and only covers five of
the 17 medications she is prescribed.
The family savings accounts are dry and her outstanding medical bills are currently up to £160,000 ($250,000).
Shanyna has set up the S.A.I Foundation to raise money for her treatment but fears she may not be able to continue.
She relies on family and friends for financial help and they have rallied around her for support.
‘At this point I just do everything I can to get the help that's needed for her,’ her friend Tolungia Webb said.
Shanyna
hopes that the foundation will be able to raise enough money to cover
her medical bills and help others in the same situation.
She said: ‘If it means me dealing with this to help someone else, I'm willing to go through it.’
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