The Herald (South Africa)

Indian amputee’s new donor hands adapt to her body

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When amputee Shreya Siddanagow­der was offered new hands, the Indian student didn’t hesitate — even though they were big, dark and hairy, and once belonged to a man.

Now though, not only have her new hands become more slender, they have also changed colour to match her skin tone, mystifying the doctors who carried out the rare 13-hour transplant.

“The donor was a tall man with big spindly fingers,” Siddanagow­der’s mother Suma said at their home in Pune, western India.

“Now nobody can make out that they are a man’s hands ... She has even started wearing jewellery and nail varnish.”

Siddanagow­der’s life was turned upside down in 2016 when, aged 18, she was involved in a bus accident that crushed both her arms.

A delay in getting first aid meant that both her hands had to be amputated below the elbow.

Only 200 successful hand transplant­s have taken place worldwide — including nine in India — since the first in the US in 1999 on a man whose left hand had been blown off by a firework. The first in India was conducted in 2015 at the Amrita Institute of Medical Science (Aims) in the southern state of Kerala, where Siddanagow­der’s family took her.

The biggest problem was finding a donor.

For cultural reasons, Indian families are often reluctant for the hands of their loved ones to be made available after their death.

“Usually you have to wait for a long time,” Subramania Iyer, a member of a team of doctors who operated on Siddanagow­der, said.

As a result, those seeking a transplant “are so desperate that they don’t mind if the hands are from a different gender”, Iyer, a specialist in reconstruc­tive surgery, said.

Eventually, the hospital obtained a pair of hands from a man in August 2017.

Siddanagow­der and her family accepted.

The donor hands were first attached by the bones before the tendons, blood vessels and skin were painstakin­gly stitched together.

After the transplant, she had to undergo more than a year of physiother­apy for her body and brain to get used to the new hands and obtain mobility and sensation.

Iyer said the colour of Siddanagow­der’s hands had quickly begun to show a lot of change, but that it is difficult to pinpoint why.

Siddanagow­der on her part is loving the transforma­tion — she even wrote her recent college exam with her new hands — and so are her doctors.

“We all feel very happy for her,” Iyer said.

“The best moment was when she sent me a handwritte­n note on my birthday. I could not have asked for a better birthday gift. ”—

 ?? Picture: SANKET WANKHADE ?? PRECIOUS GIFT: Shreya Siddanagow­der gestures during an interview at her home last Saturday, more than two years after transplant surgery for both hands
Picture: SANKET WANKHADE PRECIOUS GIFT: Shreya Siddanagow­der gestures during an interview at her home last Saturday, more than two years after transplant surgery for both hands

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