Houston Chronicle Sunday

Surgery lets man be just a ‘face in the crowd’

Rare face transplant renews hope for man who had shot himself

- By Sharon Cohen

ROCHESTER, Minn. — He’d been waiting for this day, and when his doctor handed him the mirror, Andy Sandness stared at his image and absorbed the enormity of the moment: He had a new face, one that had belonged to another man.

His father and his brother, joined by doctors and nurses at Mayo Clinic, watched him examine his swollen features. He was just starting to heal from one of the rarest surgeries in the world — a face transplant, the first at the medical center. He had the nose, cheeks, mouth, lips, jaw, chin, even the teeth of his donor. Resting in his hospital bed, he still couldn’t speak clearly, but he had something to say.

“Far exceeded my expectatio­ns,” he scrawled in a notebook.

“You don’t know how happy that makes us feel,” Dr. Samir Mardini replied as he read the message aloud, addressing the man who’d become his friend over the last decade.

‘Don’t let me die!’

The exchange came near the end of an extraordin­ary medical journey that revolved around two outdoorsme­n, both just 21 when they decided to kill themselves: Sandness survived but with a face almost destroyed by a gunshot; the other man died.

Their paths wouldn’t converge for years, but when they did — in side-by-side operating rooms — one man’s tragedy offered hope the other would have a second chance at a normal life.

Two days before Christmas in 2006, a deeply depressed Andy Sandness put a rifle beneath his chin and pulled the trigger.

Instantly, he knew he’d made a terrible mistake. When police arrived, he begged: “Please, please don’t let me die!”

He was rushed from his home in eastern Wyoming, treated at two hospitals, then transferre­d to Mayo Clinic, where he met Mardini, a plastic surgeon whose specialty is facial reconstruc­tion.

Sandness had no nose or jaw. His mouth was shattered; just two teeth remained. He’d lost some vision in his left eye.

Mardini and his team reconstruc­ted his upper and lower jaw with bone, muscle and skin from the hip and a leg. They reconnecte­d facial bones with titanium plates and screws.

After about eight surgeries over 4½ months, Sandness returned to tiny Newcastle, Wyo., where friends and family embraced him. He worked at a lodge, in the oil fields and as an electricia­n’s apprentice.

But his world had shrunk. When he went grocery shopping, he avoided eye contact with children so he wouldn’t scare them. He had almost no social life. He retreated to the hills to hunt and fish.

Sandness adapted. His mouth was too small for a spoon so he tore food into bits. He wore a prosthetic nose, but it constantly fell off outdoors.

“You never fully accept it,” he says. “You eventually say, ‘OK, is there something else we can do?’”

The prospect of 15 more surgeries Mardini had mapped out scared him. For several years, Sandness made annual visits to Mayo.

56-hour operation

Then in 2012, Mardini called. It looked like Mayo was going to launch a face transplant program; Sandness might be an ideal patient.

Mardini urged him to “think very hard” about the transplant. Only about two dozen had been done worldwide. He wanted Sandness to understand the risks and lifelong regimen of anti-re- jection drugs.

“When you look like I looked and you function like I functioned, every little bit of hope that you have, you just jump on it,” he says, “and this was the surgery that was going to take me back to normal.”

Last June, five months after his name was added to the waiting list of the United Network for Organ Sharing, he got word: A donor was available.

Calen “Rudy” Ross had fatally shot himself. His devastated 19-year-old widow, Lilly, was eight months pregnant. Despite her grief, she carried out her husband’s wishes to be an organ donor. She met with a coordinato­r from LifeSource, a nonprofit group that helps families in the upper Midwest facilitate organ and tissue donation.

“I was skeptical at first,” Lilly says. “I didn’t want to walk around and all of a sudden see Calen.” She was reassured because the donor had his own eyes and forehead and wouldn’t be recognizab­le as her husband.

Mayo’s medical team, which had rehearsed the surgery for 3½ years with cadaver heads, gathered one June night to start a 56-hour marathon.

It took about 24 hours to procure the donor’s face, which involved taking bone, muscle, skin and nerves — and almost the same time to prepare Sandness. His face was rebuilt below his eyes, taking an additional 32 hours.

Having a nose and mouth are blessings, he says. “The looks are a bonus.”

Sandness, now 31, is thrilled to eat steak and pizza again.

He also savors his anonymity. Recently, he attended a Minnesota Wild hockey game where, he says, he was “just another face in the crowd.”

Just thinking about that makes him smile.

 ?? Eric M. Sheahan / Mayo Clinic via Associated Press ?? Andy Sandness, right, talks with his father, Reed, and Dr. Samir Mardini, left, before Andy’s face transplant procedure at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.
Eric M. Sheahan / Mayo Clinic via Associated Press Andy Sandness, right, talks with his father, Reed, and Dr. Samir Mardini, left, before Andy’s face transplant procedure at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.
 ??  ?? Andy Sandness before his injuries in 2006, left, and after his face transplant surgery.
Andy Sandness before his injuries in 2006, left, and after his face transplant surgery.
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