Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Surgeons ‘grow’ new ear for injured soldier

- By Allyson Chiu

Woman’s cartilage was used to reconstruc­t ear on her forearm.

Two years ago, Army Pvt. Shamika Burrage almost died when she was ejected from her car during a crash in Texas. Afterward, when she woke up in the hospital, she wasn’t whole. Her left ear was gone. But the now-21-year-old is on the path to recovery. And due to a procedure hailed as the first of its kind in the Army, an ear was reconstruc­ted and “grown” under the skin of her right forearm, according to the Army.

No prosthetic­s were needed. Instead, plastic surgeons used the soldier’s cartilage.

The ear was later attached to Burrage’s head by surgeons at William Beaumont Army Medical Center in El Paso. The Army said Burrage recovered her hearing and that the operation was a success, according to a recent statement.

The reconstruc­tion involved doctors carving a new ear out of cartilage harvested from Burrage’s ribs. The ear was then placed under her forearm skin to let it grow.

The procedure is one of the most complicate­d ear constructi­ons in the U.S., according to an ABC News report, and allows for the formation of new blood vessels in the cartilage. This means Burrage will also have feeling in her new ear, the Army said.

“The whole goal is by the time she’s done with all this, it looks good, it’s sensate, and in five years if somebody doesn’t know her they won’t notice,” Lt. Col. Owen Johnson III, chief of plastic and reconstruc­tive surgery at the medical center was quoted as saying in the statement.

Losing her ear was just one of many injuries Burrage sustained in 2016 when a tire of her car blew out, causing the car to skid 700 feet before flipping several times. Burrage had been driving with her pregnant cousin from Mississipp­i to Fort Bliss, Texas. While her cousin had only minor wounds, Burrage suffered head injuries and compressio­n fractures in the spine.

“I was on the ground, I just looked up and (her cousin) was right there,” she said in the statement. “Then I remember people walking up to us, asking if we were OK and then I blacked out.”

Had she received medical assistance 30 minutes later, doctors said, she would have bled to death.

After the accident, Burrage said she didn’t feel comfortabl­e with how she looked and was presented with plastic surgery as an option. While she was initially scared about going through with the reconstruc­tion, she said she wanted to see what doctors could do.

 ?? U.S. ARMY ?? Doctors carved a new ear out of cartilage from Pvt. Shamika Burrage’s ribs
U.S. ARMY Doctors carved a new ear out of cartilage from Pvt. Shamika Burrage’s ribs

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