DIGITALLY ENHANCED: Sixteen-month-old Lei Yadi Min from Myanmar has 12 fingers and 14 toes.
Relevant offers
From almost the moment Le Yati Min was born, her mother knew the girl had a little something extra.
"I asked the nurses whether my kid was born complete with hands and legs," says her mother. "They replied that the baby even has more than she needs."
Born with 12 fingers and 14 toes, Le may be the most "digitally enhanced" person in the world. Now, the 16-month-old girl's family in impoverished Myanmar is seeking a Guinness World Record to prove it.
A neighbour is helping her mother apply to claim the record hearing that a boy from India currently hold bragging rights for the most digits, with 12 fingers and 13 toes.
Polydactylism - being born with an extra finger or toe - is fairly unusual, but it is even more rare for someone to have spare functional digits on both hands and feet, as Le does.
Le lives with her family in a small wooden house on the outskirts of the Southeast Asian country's former capital of Yangon, where she runs around with seven toes on each foot.
Proud mom Phyo Min Min Soe, 26, said that she'd be happen to see Le gain a world record, but even without that, her daughter already has a happy life, and even some natural advantages.
"She seems to have a stronger grip on things - so she doesn't drop things much," she says, as Le plays nearby with a mobile phone.
According to the Guinness World Records website, the record for most fingers and toes for a living person is currently held by two people in India, who have 12 fingers and 13 toes each.
- AP
Sponsored links
Kiwi's first baseball game goes wrong
Naked acrobat arrested in San Francisco
Guilty of taking snakes on a plane
Speedster was just 'drying off car'
Hitchhiking cat heads home finally
Pope blesses bikers in St Peter's Square
Being an 'ugly prostitute' isn't a crime
Big chill brings new flooding risk
Crown defending expert Lundy witness
Spaghetti-eating driver in fatal crash
Arrests made after maiming at bar
TVNZ part of deal for football TV rights
Death-row dogs in pound break-out
Charlie Sheen 'fires Selma Blair'
Microsoft says it freed millions from botnet
John Mayer teams up with Prancercise Lady
Goalkeeper plays on despite bullet in his head
Globally more mobiles than toothbrushes
Kiwi's first baseball game goes wrong
Big chill brings new flooding risk
Spaghetti-eating driver in fatal crash
Early-season Man United, Chelsea match-up
Nurse 'lets slip Kimye baby name'
Sesame Street creates a Muppet whose dad is in jail
The most powerful thing you'll see today
Hairy-leg stockings cause a storm
