Montreal Gazette

S. African university performs successful penis transplant

- GERALD IMRAY

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 Stellen bosch 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.

 ?? AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Andre van der Merwe, left, and Rafique Moosa announce the world’s first successful penis transplant in South Africa Friday.
AFP/GETTY IMAGES Andre van der Merwe, left, and Rafique Moosa announce the world’s first successful penis transplant in South Africa Friday.

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