French doctors perform 1st full face transplant
July 8: French doctors have carried out a successful full-face transplant — eyelids, tear ducts and all — on a 35-year-old man, the hospital where the operation took place confirmed on Thursday. Doctors carried out the 12-hour operation June 26 and 27 on a patient — identified only as “Jerome” — afflicted with a face-disfiguring genetic disorder. The head surgeon, Laurent Lantieri, described the surgery as a world first because it included a difficult and unprecedented transplant of tear ducts and eyelids.
A similar procedure carried out in Spain earlier in 2010 replaced most of the face, but not the tear ducts. Dr Lantieri, who has already performed four other partial or nearly-complete face transplants, said before the operation that reconnecting tear ducts and replacing eyelids was the “extremely challenging.”
“My patient is doing well. He is walking, eating, talking. His beard has started to grow back on his new face,” said Dr Lantieri, who operated on Jerome at the Creteil Henri-Mondor hospital in the Paris suburbs. “The first time he looked at himself in the mirror he stuck both thumbs up,” he told a local newspaper, the Parisien. “He was waiting for this transplant for two years. He is very happy.”
Dr Lantieri’s team operated on another patient suffering from the same genetic disorder, a type of neurofibromatosis called Von Recklinghausen’s disease, in 2007. In that case the tumour was so massive and hideous that the man could neither eat or speak properly. Less then 13 months after the transplant, however, the man was working full-time. A face transplant involves the removal of the entire face from a corpse, including mouth and eyelids, and grafting it onto the patient.
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