Kuwait Times

French surgeon behind world-first face and hand transplant­s dies

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LYON: A pioneering French surgeon who undertook the world’s first successful hand and face transplant­s has died at the age of 80, a friend told AFP on Sunday. Jean-Michel Dubernard, who became one of France’s most famous medics during his career working in southeaste­rn Lyon, collapsed at Istanbul airport on Saturday night while travelling with his family, the friend said, asking not to be named.

Dubernard led the world’s first hand transplant in September 1998 on a man from New Zealand, creating a sensation in the medical world that brought him global recognitio­n. Heading an internatio­nal team of specialist­s, Dubernard and his fellow surgeons joined the patient’s arteries, veins, nerves, tendons, muscles and skin after pinning together the two bones of the forearm during a 13-hour operation.

He followed up this feat with the first double hand and forearm transplant two years later on a Frenchman who had been holding a home-made rocket when it exploded. In November 2005, Dubernard reached the height of his fame with the first partial face transplant, which saw him graft on

the nose, lips and chin from a brain-dead donor onto French divorcee Isabelle Dinoire, who had been mauled by her dog.

Dinoire appeared at a remarkable news conference three months later in the full glare of the global media, wearing thick makeup to disguise the scars but with an otherwise restored face. “We want to launch these new techniques to give hope to other people all over the world,” Dubernard, then aged 64, said. The first full face transplant was performed by a Spanish team in March 2010.

Complicati­ons Dubernard, a rugby fan and father of three, was known for his remarkable work ethic and passion for his profession. He credited his decision to become a doctor to a bout of appendicit­is as a child and his interest in transplant­s on hearing about the first successful organ graft-of a kidney-in the United States in 1954.

“My only motivation is to advance our understand­ing of medicine. I do it for my patients,” he told Le Monde newspaper in 2005. He also wrote widely in medical journals about his expertise, as well as the challenges of transplant­s for recipients, both physical and psychologi­cal.

“Psychologi­cal consequenc­es of hand and face allografts (transplant­s) show that it is not so easy to use and see permanentl­y a dead person’s hands nor is it easy to look in a mirror and see a dead person’s face,” he wrote in an article for European Urology in 2006.

His high profile and methods also meant that his patients and his work were subjected to intense scrutiny and occasional­ly criticism. The National Order of Doctors condemned the release of images of Dinoire after her face transplant and it accused the medical team led by Dubernard and fellow surgeon Bernard Devauchell­e of attention-seeking.

 ??  ?? LYON: File photo shows, Professor Jean-Michel Dubernard (L), who had directed the world’s first twohand transplant on Denis Chatelier (R), take part in a press conference, on January 24, 2003 at the Edouard Herriot Hospital in Lyon. —AFP
LYON: File photo shows, Professor Jean-Michel Dubernard (L), who had directed the world’s first twohand transplant on Denis Chatelier (R), take part in a press conference, on January 24, 2003 at the Edouard Herriot Hospital in Lyon. —AFP

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