30-year-old
Vladimir Spiridonov, head transplant candidate / RT
|
Italian doctor Sergio
Canavero, along with his Chinese colleague Ren Xiaoping, is set to conduct the
world’s first head transplant on a 30-year-old Russian patient suffering from a
rare disease. The operation is planned for December 2017. The project was first
announced in 2013, and the man who volunteered for the procedure is Russian
Valery Spiridonov, who suffers from the extremely rare, progressive
Werdnig-Hoffmann disease.
“Canavero
initially joked it would be a Christmas present, but now this is becoming a
reality.
Most
importantly, it will happen after the results of our tests and additional
experiments being confirmed,” Spiridonov said.
Canavero
explained to RT why a Chinese partner was so important to have. “China wants to
do it because they want to win the Nobel prize. They want to prove themselves
[as] a scientific powerhouse. So it’s the new space race,” the Italian surgeon
said.
RT
America report contines:
"A
lot of media have been saying we will definitely attempt the surgery by 2017,
but that's only if every step before that proceeds smoothly," Ren told
AFP. He also refused to comment on where the donor would come from.
“It’s impossible to predict who the donor will
be. There is only one technical constraint: the body should be of the same race
as the recipient,” Spiridonov said.
The
controversy about organ donors in China is that death row inmates have
allegedly been the main source, with the authorities promising to ban the use
of their organs. However, many argue that the practice will carry on, but the
organs would be termed “donations.”
The
operation is planned to take place at Harbin Medical University in China's
northeast Heilongjiang province. It will cost about $11 million, and will last
for about 36 hours.
Donor
and patient will have their head severed from their body simultaneously, with
an ultra-sharp blade. Then, the patient’s head will be attached to the donor’s
body with biological glue, plus stitches.
Afterwards,
the patient will be put into a coma for a month, and when he wakes up, powerful
immuno-suppressants will have to be used to prevent the body and brain from
rejecting each other.
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