America's tallest man dies at age 38

Igor Vovkovinskiy speaks with WCCO reporter Holly Wagner about his new custom made size 24 Reebok Shoes. AP Photo/Rochester Post-Bulletin, Michele Jokinen

Igor Vovkovinskiy speaks with WCCO reporter Holly Wagner about his new custom made size 24 Reebok Shoes. AP Photo/Rochester Post-Bulletin, Michele Jokinen

Published Aug 24, 2021

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The tallest man in America - he stood 2.35 meters - has died of a heart problem at the age of 38, his mother said on Facebook.

Ukrainian-born Igor Vovkovinskiy had a condition called pituitary gigantism that caused excessive secretion of growth hormone.

His mother, who said her son died Friday in Minnesota, had brought him from their home in Ukraine in 1989 to get medical treatment at the Mayo Clinic in the northern US state.

Two surgeries saved his life but failed to stop his growth.

Igor Vovkovinskiy has an imprint taken of his foot by technicians as part of a shoe fitting at Reebok headquarters, in Canton. Picture: AP Photo/Steven Senne

At age 27, Guinness World Records declared Vovkovinskiy the tallest person in America.

In the 2013 edition of the Eurovision song contest, Vovkovinskiy walked on stage cradling Ukraine's singer, Zlata Ognevich, in his arms. She looked tiny and doll-like.

Vovkovinskiy enjoyed another moment of celebrity in 2009 when then-president Barack Obama noticed him towering above the crowd at a political rally. Vovkovinskiy was wearing a T-shirt that called him the "World's Biggest Obama Supporter." He shook hands with the politician.

Guinness World Records says the tallest person in the world now is a Turkish man named Sultan Kosen, who is 8 feet 2 inches tall (2.51 meters).

Chandra Bahadur Dangi (L) from Nepal and Sultan Kosen from Turkey pose for photographers during a photocall for the Guinness World Records in London. Photo: FACUNDO ARRIZABALAGA/EPA

The tallest man in modern US history was Robert Wadlow, who was 2.72 meters. He also suffered from a growth hormone disorder, and died in 1940 at the age of 22.

AFP

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