First child double hand transplant announced in US | Inquirer Technology

First child double hand transplant announced in US

/ 10:18 AM July 29, 2015

hands

An 8-year-old boy will get a pair of hands in the first double hand transplant for a child. INQUIRER FILE

NEW YORK, United States – An eight-year-old American has become the world’s youngest recipient of a transplant of both hands, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia announced Tuesday.

Surgeons operated for 10 hours to carry out the incredibly complicated surgery on Baltimore native Zion Harvey.

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He previously had both his hands and feet amputated and had a kidney transplant following a major infection.

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The smiling, precocious youngster had learned to eat, write and even play video games without hands.

Now he says he is looking forward to being able to throw a football with his own hands.

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It took a team of 40 doctors, nurses and other staff from plastic and reconstructive surgery, orthopedic surgery, anesthesiology and radiology, to pull off the pioneering surgery.

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Surgeons first painstakingly attached bone, then veins. Once the blood was circulating, surgeons connected tendons, muscles and nerves.

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“Zion’s kidney transplant following his infection made him a candidate for transplant because he was already taking anti-rejection medication,” said Benjamin Chang, co-director of CHOP’s Hand Transplantation Program.

Harvey is receiving daily anti-rejection medications. Doctors said he should be able to return home to Baltimore in a few weeks.

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“This surgery was the result of years of training, followed by months of planning and preparation by a remarkable team,” said L Scott Levin.

“The success of Penn’s first bilateral hand transplant on an adult, performed in 2011, gave us a foundation to adapt the intricate techniques and coordinated plans required to perform this type of complex procedure on a child.”

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The first bilateral hand and forearm transplant surgery was done in January 2000 in Lyon, France.

TOPICS: Medicine
TAGS: Medicine

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