Daily Mail

First head transplant

(but it was on a corpse!)

- By Victoria Allen Science Correspond­ent

THE world’s first human head transplant has been carried out on a corpse, it was claimed yesterday.

During an 18-hour operation, doctors in China showed that it is possible to reconnect the spine, nerves and blood vessels to a severed head.

Controvers­ial Italian neurosurge­on Professor Sergio Canavero, who announced the breakthrou­gh, said an operation on a living human was now ‘imminent’.

The next stage is a ‘full head swap’ between brain-dead organ donors – which British scientists said would be extremely difficult and ‘nothing short of criminal’.

The Chinese head transplant was performed on two human corpses by a team led by Dr Xiaoping Ren, an orthopaedi­c surgeon from Harbin Medical University. Last year he decapitate­d two rhesus monkeys and connected the head of one to the other’s body.

The date for the first live human head transplant is due to be announced in the next few days by the Chinese team, who will also release an academic paper on their operation on corpses. Their aim is to use the procedure to help people with long-term medical conditions.

The first human head transplant is expected to be carried out on a Chinese volunteer with paralysis.

Speaking at a press conference in Vienna, Professor Canavero said: ‘The first head transplant on human cadavers has been done. A full head swap between brain- dead organ donors is the next stage. And this is the final step for the formal head transplant for a medical condition.’

The professor, who wants head transplant­s to help people live beyond 120, added: ‘For too long, nature has dictated her rules to us. We are born, we grow, we age and we die. For millions of years humans have evolved and 110billion humans have died in the process. That’s genocide on an unpreceden­ted level.’

Professor Canavero was described as a modern- day Frankenste­in in 2015 when he said he would be ready to transplant a human head within two years.

British experts were unimpresse­d by yesterday’s announceme­nt.

Dr James Fildes, NHS principal research scientist at the transplant centre of the University Hospital of South Manchester, said: ‘To surgically attach a dead head on to a dead body warrants no publicity and is not a head transplant.

‘His next goal, to transplant the head from a brain-dead donor on to the body of a brain-dead donor, again will not be a head transplant.

‘Unless Canavero or Ren provide real evidence that they can perform a head, or more appropriat­ely, a whole-body transplant on a large animal that recovers sufficient function to improve quality of life, this entire project is morally wrong.’

Jan Schnupp, professor of neuroscien­ce at the University of Oxford, said: ‘Professor Canavero’s enthusiasm notwithsta­nding, I find it inconceiva­ble that ethics committees in any reputable research or clinical institutio­ns would give a green light to living human head transplant­s in the foreseeabl­e future.

‘Indeed, attempting such a thing given the current state of the art would be nothing short of criminal.’

‘This entire project is morally wrong’

 ??  ?? New home? Meghan Markle with her dogs, named Guy and Bogart
New home? Meghan Markle with her dogs, named Guy and Bogart

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