The French woman who received the world's first partial
face transplant has complete feeling in the new tissue five months after the
operation, she told a Sunday newspaper.
Isabelle Dinoire the woman who receveid a new
nose, chin and mouth in a groundbreaking transplant operation on Nov. 27
addresses reporters during her first press conference after the
transplant, at the hospital in Amiensl, northern France in this Feb. 6,
2006 file photo. [AP] |
Isabelle Dinoire, 38, also told the newspaper Le Journal du Dimanche that the
hardest part of her recovery appears to be getting to know herself again. When
asked if she has accepted her new face, she responded: "It's too difficult to
explain."
She takes out old photos and, shocked at the difference between her former
face and her new one, tells herself that she simply has aged, she said.
Dinoire said her speech has improved as she has gained more facial mobility.
"The scars have considerably healed. The doctors are confident. In addition,
I have recovered total feeling," Dinoire said.
The mother of two last spoke publicly in February, when she held a lengthy
news conference with medical personnel in the northern town of Amiens, where her
Nov. 27 operation took place.
Dinoire lost much of her face when she was mauled by her pet Labrador while
knocked out from drugs she took to forget a trying week. Her lipless gums and
teeth were permanently exposed, and most of her nose was missing.
Dinoire wore a surgical mask in public to avoid frightening people. During 15
hours of surgery, a team of doctors replaced the gaping hole in her face with a
donor transplant that included a new nose, mouth and chin.
"Each day that passes, I think, above all, of the donor and her family whom I
cannot thank enough," she told the newspaper. "We must not forget that today,
thanks to them, I have become visible again."
Dinoire noted that her speech had improved. During the February news
conference, her words were difficult to understand because her new mouth was
frozen open.
Today, "I still have a little problem of mobility, symmetry as the doctors
say."
She said the real difficulty was pronouncing sounds that use the lips, such
as the "b" or "p" sounds.
Today, Dinoire still only leaves her apartment if accompanied and has not
replaced the mirrors she removed from her home after the accident, she told the
newspaper during an interview in a small room at the Amiens teaching hospital.
Each week, Dinoire visits the Amiens hospital for a battery of tests,
re-education sessions and visits with a psychologist.
Each month, she travels to a hospital in Lyon, in southeast France, where she
spent weeks after the operation receiving an anti-rejection treatment so her
body would accept the new tissue. She undergoes more testing and has her
treatment adjusted.
She now takes 10 pills a day, down from the original 20.
In addition, several times a day she must examine a small patch of skin from
the donor on her stomach, a "sentinel ... that should sound the alarm if
something goes wrong," she said.
She also has to do the same with her face, examining it in a magnifying
mirror ¡ª the only mirror now in her home.