日批在线视频_内射毛片内射国产夫妻_亚洲三级小视频_在线观看亚洲大片短视频_女性向h片资源在线观看_亚洲最大网

  Home>News Center>Life
         
 

Face transplants inch toward reality
(Agencies)
Updated: 2004-05-27 08:34

Doctors in Kentucky have begun preparing a document to be submitted to an ethics panel at the University of Louisville School of Medicine seeking permission to perform a face transplant, the lead researcher in the endeavor told CNN.

"We are in the process of doing that," Dr. John Barker, director of plastic surgery research at the University of Louisville, said Tuesday. "We have a team of about 16 or 17 people."

The radical procedure, intended for patients with severe disfigurement, has not been attempted before, though doctors in the past have successfully reattached faces to patients after accidents.

The development was first reported in the May 29 issue of New Scientist magazine.

The operation could offer new hope for those who suffer severe burns, cancer or gunshot wounds. The surgery will attach facial tissue and blood vessels from a cadaver to a new patient.

The transplant also brings a lifetime dependence on expensive immuno-suppressant drugs to block rejection of the new tissue.

Candidates could include people whose faces have been grossly disfigured, as happened to Jacqueline Saburido, who was a 20-year-old student at the University of Texas at Austin in 1999 when her car was hit by a driver who had been drinking.

Saburido's face -- including her nose, lips and ears -- burned in the resulting fire. Since then, she has undergone more than 40 surgeries, most of them on her face and hands.

"My life completely, completely, completely changed," she told CNN affiliate WAVE, in Louisville.

In addition to reconstructing her face, she hopes to reconstruct her life, fall in love and have children, something a face transplant could facilitate.

"I hope I can do [so] soon, you know, because life is now," she said.

But any attempt at such a procedure is at least a year off, said Kathy Keadle, director of communications and marketing for the school's health sciences center.

The ethics committee -- called an institutional review board -- is charged with approving or turning down requests for experimental procedures.

The novel procedure would require approval not only from the Louisville school's board but also from a sister institution's -- Western Kentucky University -- "to make certain all questions are asked and addressed," said Kathy Keadle, director of communications and marketing for the Louisville school's health sciences center.

Keadle said any such attempt is at least a year off. "That's just one of many, many things that would need to happen. ... There's still quite a lot to do," she said.

Surgical teams in Britain, France and Cleveland, Ohio, are also considering performing such an operation, but Barker said he would not predict when his team would carry out the procedure.

"We'd rather not say," he said in a telephone interview. "The minute you put a date or a time -- then all of a sudden, it's a race."

Recent successes in multiple tissue transplants -- such as hands -- led surgeons to consider attempting the face procedure, Barker said.

The problem of transplanting skin has recently been overcome, paving the way for researchers to attempt a face transplant, Barker said. Unlike the transplant of solid organs -- such as hearts and kidneys, which have been routine for decades -- procedures such as hand transplants require multiple types of tissue, including skin.

Researchers found that a cocktail of drugs used for kidney transplants would also work with skin transplants.

"When we did the initial research that led to the hand transplant -- in animals -- we found a certain cocktail of drugs is effective in stopping rejection of skin," he said. "That was what had held back hand and face [transplants] and anything that includes skin."

Doctors currently are limited to grafting skin and muscles from other parts of the body in patients who have suffered catastrophic damage to their faces, but the result is typically cosmetically unsatisfactory.

Still, some bioethicists have urged caution: The face recipients would need to undergo life-long immunosuppression, which carries increased long-term risks of cancer.

The Louisville team includes three bioethicists, Barker said.

He noted that the underlying skeletal structure of a recipient would differ from that of a donor, meaning that the recipient's face would look much different from that of the donor's.

Because of the lengthy approval process required before any such attempt of the procedure, patient recruitment has not begun, Keadle said.

"The patients who will need this surgery, I'm sure, are desperate for hope, and we wouldn't want to dangle that hope" so far in advance, she said.

 
  Today's Top News     Top Life News
 

Wen raises 5 proposals to attain global prosperity

 

   
 

Key officials 'knew' of bad milk powder

 

   
 

Official: No ceiling on US film imports

 

   
 

Nuclear scientist to become Iraqi premier

 

   
 

Hospital releases SARS vaccine test result

 

   
 

Local gov'ts told to curb price hikes

 

   
  Face transplants inch toward reality
   
  Chinese educators welcome 'multiple intelligence' theory
   
  MTV to launch gay cable network
   
  Boys in the band
   
  Kids: Less study, more time for life
   
  Material Girl kicks off 'Re-Invention' tour
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  Feature  
  Pitt voted smelliest celebrity!  
Advertisement
         
主站蜘蛛池模板: 日韩成人免费在线 | 337p粉嫩大胆噜噜噜亚瑟影院 | 国产成人精品毛片 | 欧美在线高清 | 波多一区二区 | 麻豆小视频 | 一级久久 | 日韩国产激情 | 久久视频国产 | 精品动漫一区 | av黄色网| 欧美成人另类 | 三浦理惠子av在线播放 | 久久中文免费视频 | 欧美午夜激情影院 | 久久久久久久久国产精品 | 日韩一区二区在线观看视频 | 亚洲视频大全 | 国产羞羞网站 | 国产精品久久久久久精 | 国产午夜麻豆影院在线观看 | 麻豆国产原创 | 国产无遮挡 | 日韩精品在线播放 | 国模精品视频一区二区 | 日韩高清一级 | 日韩欧美亚洲视频 | 久久久久久久性 | 亚洲欧洲色 | 福利片在线 | 亚洲男人天堂视频 | 国产亚洲欧美一区二区 | 日本中文在线观看 | 香蕉视频污污 | 欧美一区亚洲一区 | 国产又黄又爽视频 | 黄色片一区二区 | 美国一级大黄一片免费中文 | 中文字幕在线观看第二页 | 日韩不卡中文字幕 | 美女视频一区 |