A UK woman who underwent surgery to enlarge her breasts two cup sizes ended up having her implants explode inside her body, the Daily Mirror reported.

Kim Brockhurst's cosmetic nightmare began in 2004 when she paid 4,000 pounds, nearly $7,000, to increase her size 32AA breasts. But she woke up from the surgery with double D breasts, a size way larger than she requested.

The gym instructor's breasts slowly began to lose their shape until they exploded and leaked inside her chest.

"Soon I had a big dent in my right breast and the implant on the left just exploded- leaking the implant's industrial strength silicone into by breast tissue," Brockhurst, of Wales, told the newspaper.

A decade after the botched surgery, Brockhurst is now revealing her story in the hopes that other women will think twice before receiveing breast implants.

The implants were made by a now defunct company named Poly Implant Prothese, which sold implants with industrial-grade silicone to some 47,000 British woman and thousands more all over the world, Wales Online reported.

Brockhurst said she first got breast implants because she wanted "a bit more bounce," the Mirror reported. Though she ended up with more than she wanted, she learned to live with her size DD breasts.

"But it got worse when my breasts slowly went out of shape- it was a terrible time," she told the Mirror.

A scan revealed the implants were leaking into her body.

"I still don't know where the silicone has gone in my body," she told Wales Online. "It makes you worry."

The UK's National Health Service agreed to pay to remove the busted implants, but said Brockhurst would have to fork over 3,800 pounds, $6,400, to have them replaced.

Unable to afford the replacement, Brockhurst contacted the reality show "Botched Up Bodies," which agreed to pay for the surgery and filmed the process.

Brockhurst is now a size 34D. She and other women are pursuing a compensation claim against PIP, which was filed after the company's boss was sentenced to four years in prison on fraud charges in 2013, according to Wales Online.