Skip to comments.
Ethical Concerns on Face Transplant Grow
NY Times ^
| December 6, 2005
| MICHAEL MASON and LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN
Posted on 12/06/2005 12:53:37 PM PST by neverdem
In urgent telephone calls and agonized e-mail messages, American scientists are expressing increasing concerns that the world's first partial face transplant, performed in northern France on Nov. 27, may have been undertaken without adequate medical and ethical preparation.
Some scientists say they fear that if the French effort fails, it could not only threaten the life of the transplant recipient, a 38-year-old Frenchwoman, but jeopardize years of careful planning for a new leap in transplant surgery.
"We've been working on the ethics and the science for some time, going slowly while we figure out immunology and patient selection criteria and indications," said Dr. L. Scott Levin, chief of plastic and reconstructive surgery at Duke University Medical Center. "This flies in the face of everything we've tried to do."
The scientists' worries stem in part from the execution of the surgery, and in part from news reports over the weekend that called into question the patient's emotional state.
Dr. Maria Siemionow, director of plastic surgery research at the Cleveland Clinic, who has been preparing to perform a full face transplant, said that the way the transplant was conducted appeared to conflate two experimental protocols: the transplantation of facial tissue and the infusion of stem cells from the donor bone marrow into the patient in an attempt to prevent rejection of the new face.
The first procedure, although untried until now, has been well studied, and the microsurgical techniques involved are commonplace. But the second has been successful in human subjects only rarely and only recently. While pilot studies do suggest that an infusion of stem cells from the donor can help produce "chimerism" in humans, a state in which foreign tissue is tolerated by the body with comparatively little or no suppression of the immune system, it is far from standard...
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; News/Current Events; US: Ohio
KEYWORDS: bioethics; facetransplant; france; plasticsurgery; surgeons; surgery; transplants
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-20, 21-40, 41-45 next last
1
posted on
12/06/2005 12:53:38 PM PST
by
neverdem
To: neverdem
Ethical concerns about getting a new face? Go ask Mary Tyler Moore about such things. She has gotten a few new faces.
2
posted on
12/06/2005 12:55:17 PM PST
by
BikerNYC
(Modernman should not have been banned.)
To: neverdem
Will 'ugly' people want 'pretty' faces as elective surgery?
To: neverdem
In other words it's a typical Frog move, trying to
be first for France.
4
posted on
12/06/2005 12:57:03 PM PST
by
bkepley
To: BikerNYC
Could you imagine getting Hillary's mouth?
5
posted on
12/06/2005 12:57:08 PM PST
by
RightResponse
(What if the Left, just got up and .....)
To: neverdem
Patching a woman's face with enough living tissue so she can close her mouth - bad.
Killing fetuses for their stem cells - good.
6
posted on
12/06/2005 12:57:12 PM PST
by
E. Pluribus Unum
(Islam Factoid:After forcing young girls to watch his men execute their fathers, Muhammad raped them.)
To: RightResponse
Or worse...Monica Lewinsky's!??
7
posted on
12/06/2005 12:57:33 PM PST
by
RightResponse
(What if the Left, just got up and .....)
To: neverdem
I hear Nazi Pelosi is looking for a new face....
8
posted on
12/06/2005 12:57:44 PM PST
by
EagleUSA
To: bkepley
Sounds to me like a bunch of folks bitter that someone else did it before they did.
9
posted on
12/06/2005 12:58:14 PM PST
by
Vicomte13
(Et alors?)
To: Vicomte13
Sounds to me like a bunch of folks bitter that someone else did it before they did. I'll give you that, if it turns out to be a success.
10
posted on
12/06/2005 1:02:56 PM PST
by
bkepley
To: Vicomte13
That exact point was made in an article I read yesterday, about a French doctor who was criticizing this -- he had clearly been planning to be the first, and was pissed that somebody else broke the rules (which I gather he had a hand in making) and beat him to it. The patronizing talk from doctors quoted in this article is disgusting.
To: RightResponse
I wonder if you could ever get the taste out of it?
To: neverdem
13
posted on
12/06/2005 1:10:12 PM PST
by
finnman69
(cum puella incedit minore medio corpore sub quo manifestu s globus, inflammare animos)
To: BikerNYC
The French caught doing something unethical.
14
posted on
12/06/2005 1:10:45 PM PST
by
zerosix
(Native Sunflower)
To: US admirer
If she had her vagina transplanted on her face, then would it be sex?
15
posted on
12/06/2005 1:11:53 PM PST
by
RightResponse
(What if the Left, just got up and .....)
To: neverdem
I think the real problem here is that the NYT has an article about ethics. Did they outsource the writing?
16
posted on
12/06/2005 1:12:31 PM PST
by
highlander_UW
(I don't know what my future holds, but I know Who holds my future)
To: neverdem
said Dr. L. Scott Levin, chief of plastic and reconstructive surgery at Duke University Medical Center: "This flies in the face of everything we've tried to do." An unintentional pun?
17
posted on
12/06/2005 1:12:37 PM PST
by
Veto!
(Opinions freely dispensed as advice)
To: RightResponse
If she had her vagina transplanted on her face, then would it be sex?
No, but it would be if it were transplanted on my face.
18
posted on
12/06/2005 1:16:57 PM PST
by
BikerNYC
(Modernman should not have been banned.)
To: BikerNYC
Well stated, and in true Biker fashion....
19
posted on
12/06/2005 1:20:02 PM PST
by
RightResponse
(What if the Left, just got up and .....)
To: neverdem
I am tired about hearing "ethical concerns" from doctors. Try to tell someone without a face that they can't have one because of their ethical concerns, what a bunch of BS. The doctors in this country have turned into a bunch of elitist that control our health. In the founding papers of our country the founders talk about LIFE, LIBERTY, and the pursuit of HAPPINESS. But first we have to ask a doctor if he has any ethical concerns.
And this type of BS is destroying the ability of people to obtain good medical experiments that may save their lives. Now if someone wants a new face and is willing to take the deep risk of immune suppression drugs then what business is it of doctors, the FDA, or anyone else?
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-20, 21-40, 41-45 next last
Disclaimer:
Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual
posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its
management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the
exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson