A 33-year-old Polish man whose face was torn off by stone-cutting
machinery gives a thumbs-up after undergoing a total face transplant in
Gliwice, Poland
AP
A 33-year-old Polish man received a face transplant just three weeks
after being disfigured in a workplace accident, in what his doctors said
Wednesday is the fastest time frame to date for such an operation. It was
Poland's first face transplant.
Face transplants are extraordinarily complicated and relatively rare
procedures that usually require extensive preparation, typically months or
years. But medical officials said the Polish patient's condition was
deteriorating so rapidly that a transplant was seen as the only option. The
patient is now being watched for any potential infections.
The patient worked at stonemason's workshop near the southwestern city
of Wroclaw where on April 23 a machine used to cut stone tore off most of his
face and crushed his upper jaw, reports The Associated Press.
The man, identified only as Grzegorz, received intensive treatment at a
hospital in Wroclaw, but an attempt to reattach his own face failed, leaving an
area close to the brain exposed to infections, doctors said. The damage was too
extensive for doctors to temporarily seal the exposed areas.
So he was taken to the Cancer Centre and Institute of Oncology in
Gliwice, which is the only place in Poland licensed to perform face
transplants. The centre has experience in facial reconstruction for patients
disfigured by cancer and its experts have practiced face transplants on
cadavers.
Doctors at the centre said the 27-hour face and bone transplant was
performed May 15 soon after a matching donor was found.
The surgery reconstructed the area around the eyes, the nose, jaws and
palate and other parts of the man's face. Pictures show surgery stitches
running from above the patient's right eye, under the left eye and around the
face to the neck.
The donor, a 34-year-old man, was chosen from a national registry of
potential donors after his age, gender, blood group and body features were
determined to be a good match for the injured man.
The head of the team of surgeons and other specialists, Dr. Adam
Maciejewski, said the operation was the world's first life-saving face
transplant carried out so soon after the damage. Face transplants are usually a
last resort after conventional reconstructive and plastic surgeries have been
tried.
"In such an extensive injury, where the structures close to the
skull base and in contact with the brain area are exposed, any infection would
be dangerous, not to mention the impossibility to function normally including
problems with breathing, with eating," Maciejewski said. "All that
led us in one direction."
"We assume the surgery will allow the patient to return to normal
life. He will be able to breathe, to eat, to see."
The patient is now breathing on his own and responds to questions by
nodding his head or squeezing the hands of doctors. But his condition is
serious and it will be months before the doctors can describe the procedure as
a full success, said Dr. Krzysztof Olejnik, head of the team of
anaesthesiologists.
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