Face Transplants
Nov. 6th, 2003 05:19 pmI was waiting in the barbershop today, and going through the magazines. It seems that Popular Mechanics now reports on medical research, and I read an article on face transplants.
Up until now, when doctors needed to do major facial reconstruction on accident and burn patients, they would remove tissue from another area of the patient's body, and graft it on to the face. They ended up with a mask-like effect because the tiny nerves and muscles that make an expressive face could not be grafted on.
But now, surgeons can remove the entire face from a donor body and replace the patient's damaged face. They cut off your old face, replace it with the new one. It takes about 14 hours of microsurgery, and doses of anti-rejection drugs.
Up until now, when doctors needed to do major facial reconstruction on accident and burn patients, they would remove tissue from another area of the patient's body, and graft it on to the face. They ended up with a mask-like effect because the tiny nerves and muscles that make an expressive face could not be grafted on.
But now, surgeons can remove the entire face from a donor body and replace the patient's damaged face. They cut off your old face, replace it with the new one. It takes about 14 hours of microsurgery, and doses of anti-rejection drugs.