The source for most of this story comes from handtransplant.com, a website showcasing the success Jewish Hospital and its partners have achieved with hand transplants since they pioneered the world’s first long term hand transplant in January 1999.
As with all organ transplants (hearts, livers, and even hands) one of the greatest challenges a patient faces is organ rejection, a process where the immune system attacks the new organ as a foreign invader. For decades now we have had the medical means to fight organ rejection, although the treatment is error prone, requires the patient to stick to a rigourous regiment of drugs, and is plagued with several negative side effects.
Even assuming the problem of organ rejection can be contained, the problem of properly attaching the tiny veins, arteries, and other parts of the body to the new organ is quite a challenge. New advances in microsurgery have greatly enhanced our ability to overcome this challenge, paving the way for the hand transplants of today. Here is a crude outline of the procedure:
The surgeon will progress with tissue repair in the following order: bone fixation, tendon repair, artery repair, nerve repair, then vein repair. The surgery can last from 12-16 hours. In comparison, a typical heart transplant takes six to eight hours and a liver transplant, eight to twelve hours. Typical post-operative complications include blockage of the blood supply, infections and rejection.
Want to learn more? Check out this detailed video of one man’s experience with a double hand transplant:
Image: source