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Today's scientists have the skills and experience to transplant a human face

Posted By: News-Medical in Medical Research News

Sepember 20, 2004

A University of Louisville-led research team studying the face transplant has developed guidelines it says are critical to the success of the still-untried procedure.

The guidelines are outlined in a Sept. 17 article appearing in the American Journal of Bioethics, On the Ethics of Facial Transplantation Research. The article is accompanied by critiques from more than a dozen leading bioethicists, psychologists, reconstructive surgeons and others.

Today's scientists have the skills and experience to transplant a human face but they also need to consider the wide array of ethical and psychological issues involved, says the team, which also includes researchers from Utrecht University in the Netherlands.

"Our goal is to encourage open discussion of the ethics of doing a face transplant before it is performed," says John Barker, team leader and U of L's director of plastic surgery research.

The hopes, anxieties and emotional stability of transplant recipients have always posed ethical concerns and these issues that would become even more critical in face transplants, says Osborne Wiggins, a philosophy professor and clinical investigator at U of L who was lead author on the article.

"At stake is a person's self-image, social acceptability and sense of normalcy," Wiggins says.

Analyzing and evaluating the ethical and psychological implications of a possible face transplant is one part of an ongoing face transplant research program at U of L. Several milestones still need to be crossed before launching a clinical program, including:

Face transplants are not intended to provide cosmetic enhancement, but to provide enough improvement to allow the most disfigured people to re-enter society. Experts at U of L have been conducting research for years on transplanting multiple tissue from one person to another. In 1999, a team from the university performed the first hand transplant in the United States at Louisville's Jewish Hospital.

http://www.louisville.edu

Copyright © 2004 News-Medical.Net.

This article posted October 27, 2004.

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