Fri. Nov 8th, 2024
Occasional Digest - a story for you

Surgeons in New York have performed the first whole-eye transplant in a human, an accomplishment being hailed as a breakthrough even though the patient has not regained sight in the eye. 

In the six months since the surgery, performed during a partial face transplant, the grafted eye has shown important signs of health, including well-functioning blood vessels and a promising-looking retina, according to the surgical team at NYU Langone Health.

“The mere fact that we transplanted an eye is a huge step forward, something that for centuries has been thought about, but it’s never been performed,” team leader Eduardo Rodriguez said.

Until now, doctors have only been able to transplant the cornea, the clear front layer of the eye.

The recipient of the eye, Aaron James, is a 46-year-old military veteran from Arkansas who survived a work-related high-voltage electrical accident that destroyed the left side of his face, his nose, his mouth and his left eye.

Aaron James is prepared by a doctor ahead of his partial face transplant.
Mr James underwent the partial face transplant at NYU Langone in May.(Reuters: Joe Carotta/NYU Langone Health)

The transplant surgery took 21 hours.

Initially, doctors were just planning to include the eyeball as part of the face transplant for cosmetic reasons, Dr Rodriguez said during a Zoom interview.

“If some form of vision restoration occurred, it would be wonderful, but … the goal was for us to perform the technical operation,” and have the eyeball survive, Dr Rodriguez added.

Whatever happens going forward will be monitored, he said.

Presently, the transplanted eye is not communicating with the brain through the optic nerve.

A husband and wife pose for a candid photo.

This 2010 family photo shows Aaron James and his wife, Meagan, before his June 2021 high-voltage electricity accident.(AP: NYU Langone Health)

To encourage healing of the connection between the donor and recipient optic nerves, surgeons harvested adult stem cells from the donor’s bone marrow and injected them into the optic nerve during the transplant, hoping they would replace damaged cells and protect the nerve.

Source link