The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Hands to save her reveals how he was in theatre to help give her new ones

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two surgeons who went to do the retrieval from the donor,” explained Professor Hart, who coincident­ally lives close by Corinne in Lochwinnoc­h. “They made a final assessment that the hands were suitable and then brought them back to Leeds General. We then operated on both sides of Corinne in one theatre while the other surgeons were in the next door theatre operating on the hands. “With every cut you make, you have to decide what level to cut at. You are always trading off function against simplicity and essentiall­y you’re trying to make a custom hand for the patient.

“There were two consultant­s at each of her arms, identifyin­g the nerves and all the different tendons.”

Finally, with all the last minute checks and cuts done, the painstakin­g process of attaching Corinne’s new hands began. “The bones are plated, like you’d do with a normal fracture,” explained Professor Hart, who worked on Corinne’s left hand. “The tendons are done in the strongest way, by weaving them together and then stitching them. Once all that is complete you get to the nerves. That requires microsurge­ry, so you get the microscope in. The stitches required are the diameter of a human hair.

“It needs to be done very carefully and precisely so you get the orientatio­n of the nerve right. “Then the blood vessels are joined up.

“The arteries are done first as you want some blood to go to the hand and bleed out and get rid of any toxic products from the hand. You want to flush those through before you join up the veins. That’s possibly the hardest bit of the whole thing. “Corinne would have been through lots of intensive care, which meant a lot of cannulas had been inserted leaving very few veins to work with.

“And at least one of her arteries wasn’t too good, so it took a fair bit of technical work. It was a bit of a challenge.”

At last, after 12 long hours, the massive procedure was completed just after midnight. Corinne was to wake up from the anaestheti­c in the early hours. And when her head cleared, she had the first sight of the hands that would make her life so very different.

“My brother Davy had driven down overnight and it was him who said: ‘Look, you’ve got hands’,” she said. “With my right hand in particular I could do a wee wiggle straight away.

“I had built it up in my head that initially the hands wouldn’t feel like mine, but then over time I could convince myself these were my hands. But it was the complete opposite. “Straight away they were my hands and I had to remind myself that someone had given them. It was bizarre.”

And for Professor Hart, it was a case of coming full circle, the joy of attaching new hands almost six years after the sombre matter of having to remove Corinne’s.

“It was nice to see a completion in her care,” he admitted. “While you are doing the individual elements of the procedure you are only focusing on that and not thinking about anything else. “But afterwards you do. Corinne deserves to get the very best possible results and you want that to happen.

“It’s a very long day’s work but also a very satisfying one, being part of a big, highly competent, team of people.

“And at the end of it you have someone like Corinne who will make the very most of the hands.”

For Corinne, while the future is full of excitement and possibilit­ies, there is a long way to go. “Some people think I’ve had the operation, got my hands and that’s it. But this is really just the beginning. I have to be careful because there is absolutely no way I’m going to mess things up and risk these hands.

“That just isn’t going to happen. So although people are really keen to come and see me, I’m asking them to please stay away as I can’t fight off any infections.

“I’m thrilled at the work the surgical team have done and the way the scars have been minimised.

“Now I’m going to do my bit and devote the next 12 months to my hands.”

 ??  ?? Professor Kay leads the Leeds surgical team during Britain’s first double hand transplant in 2016
Professor Kay leads the Leeds surgical team during Britain’s first double hand transplant in 2016

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