NEW YORK -- For one little boy from Queens, giving a thumbs up is quite the feat. After he was born without a thumb, he recently had surgery to get one that didn't exist months ago.
Brandon Torres was born with only four fingers on his right hand. His left thumb is small and poorly formed, the result of Duane-radial ray syndrome, a condition so rare that there are only about 30 known cases.
The 1-year-old's case wasn't discovered until he was born.
"He was born premature one month, and that's when they told us, on the table when they were checking and counting fingers, that he was missing his right thumb," father Anderson Torres said.
Life without a thumb can be challenging.
"You can only pick up items this wide, if you're using these fingers," he said. "But the thumb allows you to really capture, pick up and define motor unlike any other finger, and therefore is the most important finger of the whole hand."
That's why Dr. Bastidas wanted Brandon to have a thumb. So a month ago, at Cohen Children's Medical Center in New Hyde Park, he removed most of Brandon's index finger and relocated it -- along with the muscles, tendons, nerves, arteries and veins -- to the thumb position.
"We knew this was going to be a great thing for him, especially because he's a boy," mother Yuli Ramirez Torres said. "You know how boys are all active and they want to play sports, and hopefully, he'll get to do all of these things now that he has a new thumb."
Brandon already has some use of his new thumb, and after some physical therapy, he'll be able to thumb-wrestle his big brother, Sebastian.
"He has his thumb now, so he will be giving people thumbs up, and we just want to raise awareness for anyone else that's out there that their kids may have this issue, and maybe give them a better future," Anderson Torres said. "He's great, he's crawling, running around, grasping things, eating his Cheerios, his brother's Cheerios, my Cheerios."
Brandon's parents tried tying back their thumbs to see what life would be like for their child, and they knew they had to try the surgery. It was not covered by their health insurance, so they are hoping to raise funds to cover the $20,000 in medical costs.
For more information on how you can help, visit their GoFundMe account at Gofundme.com/BrandonsThumbsUp.