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The New Face Lift

RiotXIX writes to tell us that US surgeons plan on moving forward with their newest experimental medical practice, a face transplant. Doctors have already succeeded in making this practice a reality with cadavers donated for medical research and will soon begin interviewing a shortlist of patients to determine who, if anyone, will be first up for this procedure. From the article: 'The chance it will work is around 50% and experts have expressed safety and ethical concerns about the procedure. The recipient would have to take powerful anti-rejection drugs for life, which carry considerable long-term health risks, says the Royal College of Surgeons of England, which formed a working party to look at the issue earlier this year.'

5 of 306 comments (clear)

  1. Anti-Rejection drugs? by Create+an+Account · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I have the feeling that someone that has had a large part of their face burned off in a bad fire isn't going to be too worried about having to take drugs for the rest of their lives. Ethical? Ask the people who need this kind of surgery if THEY think it's ethical.

  2. Good for burn victims by MrJynxx · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I suspect this procedure would be great for people who have had extreme burns to their face.

    One thing to note are the anti-rejection drugs. My uncle whose kidneys both failed, had to get one from my father in the early 90's (91 i think) and had to take anti-rejection drugs. Well, the drugs eventually gave him colon cancer (approx. 10 years of heavy use) and passed away 2 years ago. But, without the kidney transplant he would have never made it past 1992.

    It will be a trade off for these people.. potential to live a long life disfigured or a shorted life bearing a new face. Tough call?

    MrJynx

  3. Re:Butterface! by General+Alcazar · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I believe that the demand for this is for people who have seriously disfigured, malformed, or mutilated faces. If half of your face had been eaten away by some kind of bacteria or disease, I think you might think twice about getting this procedure.

    It is probably difficult to comprehend the impact major facial disfigurement can have on a person.

  4. per Wired by moviepig.com · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Wired quotes a release-form the recipient must sign:

    Your face will be removed and replaced with one donated from a cadaver, matched for tissue type, age, sex and skin color. Surgery should last 8 to 10 hours; the hospital stay, 10 to 14 days. Complications could include infections that turn your new face black and require a second transplant or reconstruction with skin grafts. Drugs to prevent rejection will be needed lifelong, and they raise the risk of kidney damage and cancer. After the transplant you might feel remorse, disappointment, or grief or guilt toward the donor. The clinic will try to shield your identity, but the press likely will discover it.

    No free lunch...

    --
    Seeing bad movies only encourages them. Watch responsibly
  5. Re:let me be the first to say by temojen · · Score: 4, Insightful

    WHAT THE HELL? Who would trade burn scars for 50% chance of death, likelyhood of chronic pain, likelyhood of further disfigurement, and no immune system for the rest of their lives?

    Self-sourced grafts and reconstructive surgery sound like a much better idea to me, but then I'm not even an orderly, let alone a reconstructive plastic surgeon.