The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Face transplant sets record

US: Corrective surgery goes down as the most extensive procedure of its type

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A volunteer firefighte­r badly burned in a 2001 blaze has received the most extensive face transplant ever carried out, covering his skull and much of his neck, a New York hospital has announced.

The surgery took place in August at the NYU Langone Medical Center. The patient, 41-year-old Patrick Hardison, is still undergoing physical therapy at the hospital but plans to return home to Senatobia, Mississipp­i, in time for the Thanksgivi­ng holiday next week.

The surgery has paved the way for him to regain normal vision, and in an interview last week he said that will let him accomplish a major goal: “I’ll start driving again.”

More than two dozen face transplant­s have been performed worldwide since the first one in France in 2005. Dr Eduardo Rodriguez, who led the surgical team that did Hardison’s transplant and recently wrote a review of the field, said Hardison’s is by far the most extensive performed successful­ly in terms of the amount of tissue transferre­d.

The transplant extends from the top of the head, over Hardison’s skull and down to the collarbone­s in front. At the back, it reaches far enough down that only a tiny patch of Hardison’s original hair re-

“This face transplant is a historic achievemen­t”

mains - its colour matched by the dark blond hair growing on his new scalp. The transplant includes both ears.

It’s “a historic achievemen­t,” said Dr Amir Dorafshar, co-director of the face transplant programme at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, who was not involved in the operation.”

 ??  ?? PIONEERING: The 26-hour surgery to rebuild Patrick Hardison’s face could allow him to drive again
PIONEERING: The 26-hour surgery to rebuild Patrick Hardison’s face could allow him to drive again

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