Other News People with face disfigured can smile again
By Ben Wasserman
Aug 24, 2008 - 12:02:26 PM
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Sunday August 24, 2008 (foodconsumer.org) -- People with
the face disfigured may smile again.
Studies
in the Lancet show patients who received face transplants did not show much of side
effects physiologically and psychologically.
Three high profile cases of face transplantation have
been reported. They have been monitored by doctors to see how the surgery would
affect their lives.
Two out of the three cases experienced recurrent episodes
of tissue in the first year.
But
psychologically all patients accepted their new faces and enjoyed some facial
functions.
The first case is a French woman named Isabelle Dinoire
who underwent her transplant in November 2005.
Her face was severely disfigured in an attack by her dog. Doctors
reported that she experienced two episodes of rejection, but recovered slowly
and steadily.
The second case involves a Chinese man whose face was
destroyed by a bear. The transplant was carried out in 2006.
After the operation, he had some
complications with tissue rejection, but he was doing well two years later, Reuters
reported.
The third case was a 29-year-old man whose face was
deformed by von Recklinghausen disease. A team of French doctors transplanted a
new nose, mouth and chin on his face in 2007. Thirteen months later he began
having more function in his face and did not experienced tissue rejection, his
doctors were cited as saying.
"Our case confirms that face transplantation is
surgically feasible and effective for the correction of specific
disfigurement," Dr. Laurent Lantieri and colleagues at the Henri-Mondor
hospital outside Paris were quoted as writing.