XI'AN: Li Guoxing looked at his new face in the mirror for the first time and
was pleased.
He then pressed his doctor's hand firmly to celebrate the passage of the most
dangerous period after ground-breaking face-transplant surgery.
A man receives a face
transplant operation in Xi'an, the capital of northwest China's Shaanxi
province, April 14, 2006. The man, surnamed Li, suffered severe injuries
from a bear attack in 2004. He underwent a face transplant operation at a
Xi'an hospital with the help of a voluntary organization. The operation
started on Thursday and lasted 13 hours. According to the hospital, the
operation was successful. It is the first successful face transplant
operation in China. [newsphoto] |
Li, 30, a farmer from Yunnan Province in Southwest China, received China's
first face transplant and only the world's second on Friday at Xijing Hospital
in Xi'an, capital of Northwest China's Shaanxi Province.
"Li has completely regained consciousness and is able to take some liquid
food," Zhang Hui, the doctor who is in charge of post-surgery treatment, told
China Daily yesterday.
The hospital earlier said in a statement that Li had been badly mauled in an
encounter with a black bear in Yunnan two years ago.
The operation, which lasted 14 hours from Thursday afternoon to early morning
on Friday, transplanted two-thirds part of a human face from a brain-dead male
to repair Li's damaged face, according to Zhang Zhiying, director of the
hospital.
"The first 24 hours after surgery are the most dangerous period, for the
microsurgery may cause blood-vessel damage," Zhang Hui said.
Even though the patient is in a stable condition, he will be totally isolated
for more than two weeks, the doctor said.
On Saturday, the doctors allowed Li to check out his new face in the mirror,
but would not let him move to let the wound heal properly.
"It is a subtle psychological process for Li to accept his new looks," said
Guo Shuzhong and Han Yan, doctors who performed the surgery.
"The surgery scar will not be obvious but there is a difference in the
donor's and recipient's skin colour, so that will be noticeable," Zhang Hui
said.
Li's nephew Qiao Xiurong, who came with him to the hospital, said he
telephoned the good news to the family in Yunnan on Saturday and Li's wife
responded that she was more worried about his health than his looks.
Six months ago, doctors in Amiens, France, performed the world's first such
procedure, transplanting lips, a chin and a nose on to a woman who had been
attacked by a dog.
(China Daily 04/17/2006 page1)