Los Angeles Times

More than just a new face

As another recipient is ‘unveiled,’ experts outline the physical, emotional and social changes involved.

- MELISSA HEALY melissa.healy@latimes.com Twitter: @LATMelissa­Healy

For face transplant patients, some of the healing process is psychologi­cal.

What comes with a new face?

For roughly 30 patients across the globe who have received face transplant­s, the answer is both very simple and complex: a new face brings a measure of normality after years of living with the unrelentin­g social cataclysm of disfigurem­ent.

For patients like Patrick Hardison, whose precedents­etting transplant was unveiled in New York this week, normality meant shopping at Macy’s without enduring the hushed remarks and quickly averted stares of strangers. It meant touching his new chin and feeling sprouts of stubble for the first time in 14 years. It meant looking his teenage daughter in the eye, offering a familiar nod of reassuranc­e and wiping tears from his new face. It meant going to a sandwich shop with an old friend and wrapping his mouth around a gyro.

But a new face exacts certain costs as well, experts said this week. When physicians surgically attach a deceased donor’s skin and facial features to a recipient’s disfigured head, that patient takes on a lifelong risk that the new tissue, which powerfully attracts the immune system’s attention, will be attacked and rejected. A handful of patients have died after getting new faces.

Other burdens are far more subtle. In most cases, transplant recipients also feel a deep responsibi­lity for a donor’s legacy. Sometimes this includes a relationsh­ip with a bereaved family.

“This is a huge psychologi­cal shift,” said medical ethicist Jennifer Blumenthal-Barby of Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, who has examined the ramificati­ons of facial transplant­ation. Candidates for such surgery “have to be pretty psychologi­cally robust to get through this.”

What doesn’t come with a new face? An identity crisis, experts said.

“It’s not to say it won’t happen, but how these patients are going to integrate this new identity hasn’t been that big an issue,” said Dr. Mark Ehrenreich, a University of Maryland psychiatri­st who was part of a facial transplant­ation team there in 2012. Scales that measure patients’ quality of life, selfimage and social confidence “have shown people do remarkably better” after surgery than they did before, Ehrenreich added.

Given the central role the face plays in forming a human being’s sense of self, that may come as a surprise. But Richard Lee Norris, the transplant recipient in that 2012 case, says it’s really pretty simple.

Norris explained that the obliterati­on of a person’s social identity comes with the trauma that necessitat­ed the transplant in the first place. After that, he said, any face that doesn’t provoke stares provides identity enough for a person to build on.

“I went from looking really, really disfigured to looking normal again. I was immediatel­y connected to my face,” said Norris, now a 41-year-old student living in New Orleans with his girlfriend.

When he looks at his face in the mirror, he said, “I see myself.”

Published case studies on transplant recipients suggest that only once has psychologi­cal rejection complicate­d the transplant of a prominent external feature. In 2001, hand transplant recipient Clint Hallam asked that his new hand be removed after failing to feel it was his own.

Transplant teams across the globe took a key lesson from the case of Hallam’s psychologi­cal rejection: that mental health profession­als are an essential component of a transplant program.

Their role is particular­ly crucial in facial transplant­s, where trauma, social withdrawal and issues of identity play such clear roles. Psychiatri­sts, psychologi­sts and social workers are key to selecting patients who are psychologi­cally resilient. These mental health experts also help shape patients’ expectatio­ns and prepare them for a long and complex recovery.

Dr. Eduardo D. Rodriguez, whose team at New York University’s Langone Medical Center gave Patrick Hardison his new face, said last week that tending to Hardison’s psychologi­cal health has been key to the procedure’s success.

“You can see he’s happy with it. It’s his face, as he says,” Rodriguez told reporters as he discussed the Mississipp­i firefighte­r whose original face essentiall­y dissolved beneath a molten mask in 2011.

“There are a lot of scars that we still have to deal with, and there’s a lot of anguish that we have to deal with, and we’re helping him,” Rodriguez said. “We’ll continue to support him.”

Like all transplant patients, Hardison can expect to spend the rest of his life on anti-rejection drugs to suppress his body’s natural response to his new face, which his immune system recognizes as foreign.

The medication­s come with an array of punishing side effects beyond the ever-present threat of infection. Transplant recipients face the lifelong prospect of anemia, arthritis, sleep difficulti­es, nausea, headache, tremors and mood swings, as well as weakened bones and the cardiovasc­ular risk that comes with having high blood pressure and high cholestero­l.

Those risks are not unique to people who get new faces: All solid organ recipients must take them. But they do pose an ethical quandary for people like Norris and Hardison.

Unlike patients for whom an organ transplant is a lifesaving necessity, no patient undergoing facial transplant would die without the surgery. On the contrary, Rodriguez said, candidates must be healthy enough to withstand a procedure that has resulted in death for at least four patients and, in Hardison’s case, required 26 hours under anesthesia.

For an essentiall­y healthy patient to undertake the risk of both surgery and a lifetime of anti-rejection drugs, “all of the procedure’s potential psychosoci­al benefits have to be weighed against these harms,” Blumenthal-Barby said. There’s also the risk that a new face won’t bring future happiness.

For Norris, the ethical conundrum was easy to resolve.

“It is a lifesaving operation, depending on how you define ‘living,’ ” said Norris, who became disfigured in a gun accident. “If you live as a recluse and deal with disgusting comments every day, that’s really not a life.”

Finally, transplant recipients like Norris and Hardison become the stewards of a uniquely personal gift — the face of a person who has died. With that comes a remarkable responsibi­lity and relationsh­ips unlike any other.

Hardison’s new face has forged a powerful psychologi­cal bond between him and a 26-year-old New York artist named David Rodebaugh, who was declared brain dead after a bicycle accident. In a video produced by Langone Medical Center, Hardison, speaking before Rodebaugh’s accident, expressed his faith that God had “an angel out there for me somewhere.”

“He’s going to call him home one day and, hopefully, when that day comes, that family is strong,” Hardison said in the video. “Because I cannot imagine losing somebody at a young age and then having to be asked to give what they’re asking them to give.”

Hardison’s prayers were answered when Rodebaugh’s mother, Nancy, agreed to allow her son’s face (as well as several of his organs) to be harvested for transplant­ation.

Later, she asked if Hardison’s family “is ready to have a grandmothe­r in their lives.”

Ehrenreich, the psychiatri­st, said that for some transplant recipients, such recognitio­n forges not only gratitude but also “a bit of pressure to live up to what you’ve been given.” For patients who have struggled with trauma and depression, that can be a tall order.

For some transplant patients, the need to find meaning in a donor’s gift can prompt a remarkable search for kinship, Blumenthal-Barby said. She cited the common observatio­n that transplant recipients are at pains to find meaningful similariti­es with a donor. Many observe post-surgical changes that they attribute to the influence of the organ donor, such as a new interest or a sudden taste for certain foods.

“Medically, that doesn’t make sense,” Blumenthal-Barby said. But for patients, they may be a powerful acknowledg­ment of an obligation, and a way to honor it.

Maybe, she said, those impulses are “an expression of deep gratitude: to let that person live on in you, to maybe even change you a little bit.”

‘It’s not to say it won’t happen, but how these patients are going to integrate this new identity hasn’t been that big an issue.’ — Dr. Mark Ehrenreich, transplant team psychiatri­st

 ?? Chuck Burton
Associated Press ?? RICHARD NORRIS, right, with a friend, spent 15 years as a recluse before his face transplant in 2012. Now, “I see myself,” he says.
Chuck Burton Associated Press RICHARD NORRIS, right, with a friend, spent 15 years as a recluse before his face transplant in 2012. Now, “I see myself,” he says.

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