Zach was different. His size was so unusual that it seemed almost impossible to comprehend. He weighed more than many first-graders. More than some second-graders, even. His appearance on national television sparked immediate conversation across the country.
Newspapers ran stories about him. Other talk shows reached out. And suddenly, this little boy from upstate New York became known nationwide simply as “the 70-pound baby.” It was a label that would follow him for the rest of his life, whether he wanted it to or not.
The Medical Mystery Behind the Headlines
What most viewers didn’t understand at the time—and what often gets lost even today when old clips resurface online—is that Zach wasn’t simply an unusually large baby. He was living with a serious medical condition that most people have never heard of.
Simpson-Golabi-Behmel Syndrome, or SGBS, is extraordinarily rare. It’s a genetic disorder that occurs so infrequently that many physicians complete their entire careers without ever treating a single patient who has it. The condition affects the body’s growth regulation in profound ways, causing accelerated physical development that can lead to numerous health complications.
For Zach, the syndrome meant his body was growing at an alarming pace. According to reports, he was gaining roughly two and a half pounds every two weeks. At the same time, he was growing nearly an inch during that same period. While other toddlers were slowly adding ounces and fractions of inches, Zach’s body was expanding at a rate that frightened everyone who cared about him.
By the time he appeared on television at not quite two years old, his physical size already exceeded that of most children entering kindergarten. His organs were enlarging along with the rest of his body, creating internal pressures and risks that his parents struggled to understand.
Imagine being a mother or father watching your child grow so rapidly, knowing something was terribly wrong, but not having clear answers about what was happening or how to help. That was the reality Zach’s parents faced every single day.
When Desperation Meets Media Exposure
In the mid-1990s, the medical landscape was vastly different from what we know today. Genetic testing was less advanced. Specialist referrals were harder to obtain. Information about rare conditions like SGBS wasn’t readily available on the internet because most families didn’t even have internet access yet.
For families dealing with unusual medical situations, especially those without extensive financial resources or comprehensive insurance coverage, finding the right care could feel nearly impossible. Insurance companies were often reluctant to approve expensive genetic testing or consultations with specialists who might be located hundreds of miles away.