First Canadian face transplant recipient reportedly doing well
MONTREAL — In a Canadian medical first, surgeons at Montreal’s Maisonneuve-Rosemont hospital announced Wednesday they’d performed a face transplant, giving a badly disfigured Quebec man a second lease on life.
Hospital officials detailed last May’s complex and risky 30-hour procedure involving Maurice Desjardins, who at 64 was described as the world’s oldest recipient of such a transplant.
A team led by plastic surgeon Dr. Daniel Borsuk was part of the first Canadian attempt at the surgery, which has been performed about 40 times worldwide since 2005.
Borsuk said there was no other option for Desjardins, who’d been living in constant pain and isolation despite five reconstructive surgeries since a hunting accident in 2011 left him without his jaw, nose and teeth.
“Imagine when you’re suffering in silence at home for years and you don’t leave your house as much as you’d like to, and you’re sleeping in a separate room because of the sound of the tracheostomy (opening in the trachea),” said Borsuk, who also teaches at Université de Montreal.
“You’re living this very difficult existence. Then, overnight essentially, you get a second lease on life.”
Desjardins came to see Borsuk in Montreal with a few requests: to be able to breathe properly, speak properly and to have a nose, lips, jaws and teeth.
Borsuk said Desjardins also wanted to be able to walk outside with his granddaughter without people staring at his disfigurement.
The patient was carefully vetted for years before the procedure.
“We put him through the wringer in terms of tests,” Borsuk said. “
“He’s so mentally tough that even with everything that was done, he’s already begun (accepting) the new face. That’s something we were counting on.”
The Quebec operation required the expertise of nine surgeons, multiple specialists and the collaboration of more than 100 professionals, including doctors, nurses and many other personnel.
After seven-and-a-half years of living with his disfigurement, 30 hours of surgery and one week in intensive care, a shocked Desjardins took a look at his new face for the first time and gave Borsuk a thumbs-up and a hug.
“You can make a face, but it has to be beautiful,” Borsuk said.