The Philippine Star

S. African university performs successful penis transplant

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STELLENBOS­CH (AP) — A South African university said Friday that it had performed a successful penis transplant.

The transplant was done in a nine-hour operation last December by specialist­s from the faculty of medicine and health services at the University of Stellenbos­ch. The patient had his penis amputated three years ago following complicati­ons from a circumcisi­on performed in his late teens, the university said.

The 21- year- old patient, whose name was not released, “has made a full recovery and has regained all function in the newly transplant­ed organ,” the university near Cape Town in southweste­rn South Africa said.

It was at least the second time the procedure had been attempted. The university did not give any details of the organ donor, but said “finding a donor was one of the major challenges.”

A man in China received a penis transplant in 2005. That operation also appeared to be successful, but doctors said the man asked them to remove his new penis two weeks later because of psychologi­cal problems experience­d by him and his wife.

Prof. Andre van der Merwe, head of Stellenbos­ch University’s urology department and leader of the South African surgical team, said they had predicted that their patient would have full use of his transplant­ed organ in about two years.

“We are very surprised by his rapid recovery,” van der Merwe said in comments released by the university.

Circumcisi­ons are performed on boys and young men as a rite of passage to adulthood in some rural parts of South Africa. Stellenbos­ch University said experts had estimated that there could be as many as 250 penis amputation­s a year in the country because of botched circumcisi­ons.

 ?? AFP ?? Andre van der Merwe (left), head of the Stellenbos­ch University Division of Urology and Rafique Moosa, executive head of the Department at the University of Stellenbos­ch, hold a press conference at the Tygerberg Hospital in Bellville in Cape Town on...
AFP Andre van der Merwe (left), head of the Stellenbos­ch University Division of Urology and Rafique Moosa, executive head of the Department at the University of Stellenbos­ch, hold a press conference at the Tygerberg Hospital in Bellville in Cape Town on...

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