News / Health
Man gets full face transplant
23 Mar 2011 at 06:48hrs | Views
A construction worker horribly disfigured in a power line accident has undergone America's first full face transplant - with the hope of smiling again and feeling kisses from his 3-year-old daughter
Dallas Wiens, 25, received a new nose, lips, skin, muscle and nerves from an unidentified dead person in an operation paid for by the US military, which wants to use what is learned to help soldiers with severe facial wounds.
Wiens will not resemble "either what he used to be or the donor," but something in between, said plastic surgeon Dr. Bohdan Pomahac). "The tissues are really molded on a new person."
Pomahac led a team of more than 30 doctors, nurses and other staff at Brigham and Women's Hospital during the 15-hour operation last week.
Wiens was listed in good condition at the Boston hospital on Monday. He did not appear at a news conference with the surgeon.
The Fort Worth man's features were all but burned away and he was left blind after hitting a power line while painting a church in November 2008.
The transplant was not able to restore his sight, and some nerves were so badly damaged from his injury that he will probably have only partial sensation on his left cheek and left forehead, the surgeon said.
"When I saw Dallas for the first time I was worried that there may not be much we could do," said Pomahac.
Wiens has been able to talk to his family on the phone, said his grandfather, Del Peterson, who attended the news conference Monday.
After the accident, Wiens said "he could choose to get bitter or he could choose to get better. His choice was to get better. Thank God today he's better," Peterson said.
In an Associated Press story and a YouTube video last fall, Wiens spoke poignantly about why he wanted a transplant and how he wanted to smile again and feel kisses from his daughter, Scarlette, who turns 4 next month.
Face transplants give horribly disfigured people hope of an option other than "looking in the mirror and hating what they see," he said.
No details about the donor were disclosed.
Peterson said his grandson hopes to become an advocate for facial donations, and he thanked the donor family, saying, "You will forever remain in our hearts and our prayers and we are grateful for your selflessness."
The surgery was paid for by the Defense Department from a $3.4 million grant given to the hospital for transplant research.
The new federal health care law also helped Wiens by allowing him to get insurance coverage under his father's plan for the expensive drugs he will have to take for the rest of his life to prevent rejection of his new face.
He will be covered until he turns 26 in May.
He expects to be eligible soon under Medicare, which insures the disabled as well as those over 65.
Wiens had no insurance when he was injured; Medicaid covered about two dozen operations until his disability payments put him over the income limit.
About a dozen face transplants have been done worldwide, in the U.S., France, Spain and China. This was the third in the US and the second at the Boston hospital.
The previous one was in April 2009 ' the partial replacement of the face of a man who was injured in a freak accident.
In 2008, Connie Culp became the nation's first partial face transplant recipient. She underwent surgery at the Cleveland Clinic.
Pomahac said one of the two people on the waiting list in Boston for a face transplant is Charla Nash, the Connecticut woman who was mauled and blinded by a friend's 200-pound (91-kilogram) chimpanzee. The animal ripped off Nash's hands, nose, lips and eyelids. She is also waiting for a hands transplant.
The world's first face transplant, also a partial, was done in France in 2005 on a woman mauled by her dog.
Doctors in Spain performed the first full face transplant last March for a farmer who was unable to breathe or eat on his own after accidentally shooting himself in the face.
Dallas Wiens, 25, received a new nose, lips, skin, muscle and nerves from an unidentified dead person in an operation paid for by the US military, which wants to use what is learned to help soldiers with severe facial wounds.
Wiens will not resemble "either what he used to be or the donor," but something in between, said plastic surgeon Dr. Bohdan Pomahac). "The tissues are really molded on a new person."
Pomahac led a team of more than 30 doctors, nurses and other staff at Brigham and Women's Hospital during the 15-hour operation last week.
Wiens was listed in good condition at the Boston hospital on Monday. He did not appear at a news conference with the surgeon.
The Fort Worth man's features were all but burned away and he was left blind after hitting a power line while painting a church in November 2008.
The transplant was not able to restore his sight, and some nerves were so badly damaged from his injury that he will probably have only partial sensation on his left cheek and left forehead, the surgeon said.
"When I saw Dallas for the first time I was worried that there may not be much we could do," said Pomahac.
Wiens has been able to talk to his family on the phone, said his grandfather, Del Peterson, who attended the news conference Monday.
After the accident, Wiens said "he could choose to get bitter or he could choose to get better. His choice was to get better. Thank God today he's better," Peterson said.
In an Associated Press story and a YouTube video last fall, Wiens spoke poignantly about why he wanted a transplant and how he wanted to smile again and feel kisses from his daughter, Scarlette, who turns 4 next month.
Face transplants give horribly disfigured people hope of an option other than "looking in the mirror and hating what they see," he said.
No details about the donor were disclosed.
Peterson said his grandson hopes to become an advocate for facial donations, and he thanked the donor family, saying, "You will forever remain in our hearts and our prayers and we are grateful for your selflessness."
The surgery was paid for by the Defense Department from a $3.4 million grant given to the hospital for transplant research.
The new federal health care law also helped Wiens by allowing him to get insurance coverage under his father's plan for the expensive drugs he will have to take for the rest of his life to prevent rejection of his new face.
He will be covered until he turns 26 in May.
He expects to be eligible soon under Medicare, which insures the disabled as well as those over 65.
Wiens had no insurance when he was injured; Medicaid covered about two dozen operations until his disability payments put him over the income limit.
About a dozen face transplants have been done worldwide, in the U.S., France, Spain and China. This was the third in the US and the second at the Boston hospital.
The previous one was in April 2009 ' the partial replacement of the face of a man who was injured in a freak accident.
In 2008, Connie Culp became the nation's first partial face transplant recipient. She underwent surgery at the Cleveland Clinic.
Pomahac said one of the two people on the waiting list in Boston for a face transplant is Charla Nash, the Connecticut woman who was mauled and blinded by a friend's 200-pound (91-kilogram) chimpanzee. The animal ripped off Nash's hands, nose, lips and eyelids. She is also waiting for a hands transplant.
The world's first face transplant, also a partial, was done in France in 2005 on a woman mauled by her dog.
Doctors in Spain performed the first full face transplant last March for a farmer who was unable to breathe or eat on his own after accidentally shooting himself in the face.
Source - Byo24News