The ground-breaking operation took a team of surgeons nineteen hours and has allowed the patient to be cancer-free.
In
Johannesburg, South Africa A 36-year-old man has undergone the world’s
first successful head transplant. The ground-breaking operation took a
team of surgeons nineteen hours to complete and has allowed the patient
to be cancer-free.
Paul
Horner, who was diagnosed with bone cancer five years ago, was on the
verge of death when he was approved for the controversial and possibly
deadly operation.
Doctor Tom Downey, who was part of the South African team who carried out the operation, told CNN he is thrilled about the results.
“It’s a
massive breakthrough,” Downey said. “We’ve proved that it can be done –
we can give someone a brand new body that is just as good, or better,
than their previous one. The success of this operation leads to infinite
possibilities.”
Surgeons at Charlotte Maxexe Johannesburg Academic Hospital inJohannesburg
carried out the operation in February but waited until they could
confirm it was successful before they made any public statement.
Downey spoke to reporters about the complexity behind the first ever head transplant.
“This
procedure is another excellent example of how medical research,
technical know-how and patient-centered care can be combined in the
quest to relieve human suffering.”
The operation was led by Professor Myron Danus and took place on February 10th of this year.
“Our
goal is for Horner to be fully functional in two years and so far we are
very pleased by his rapid recovery,” said Danus. “Before the operation,
Horner’s body was riddled with cancer and he had less than a month to
live. We were fortunate enough to find a donor body; a 21-year-old man
who has been brain dead from a serious car accident that happened in
2012. The boys body worked just fine, but his brain was not functioning
whatsoever, and there was absolutely no chance of recovery.” Danus
continued, “We received approval from the young man’s parents to use
their sons body to do the operation. They were extremely happy their son
could save a life even in the vegetated state that he was in.”
Doctors say Horner has made an 85% recovery; walking, talking and doing the normal things a healthy individual does.
The
Charlotte Maxeke Johannesburg Academic Hospital, nicknamed Joburg Gen is
an accredited general hospital in Parktown, Johannesburg, Gauteng,
South Africa. It has 1,088 beds. The hospital’s professional and support
staff exceeds 4,000 people.
Even
though Horner lives in the United States, the first-of-its-kind
operation had to be done overseas in a location where the medical
guidelines are not as strict.
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