Jerome Hamon is getting used to his new sobriquet “the man with three faces”.
He remains in a Paris hospital, three months after undergoing his second face transplant, but has quickly accepted his new “identity”.
His new face remains smooth and motionless, with his skull, skin, and features yet to be fully aligned, a gradual process reliant on immunosuppressant drugs which, hopefully, will prevent his body rejecting the transplanted material.
“I feel very well in myself,” the 43-year-old transplant recipient told reporters last week as he continues his recovery from the surgery which was carried out on January 15 and 16.
“I can’t wait to get rid of all this,” he adds, speaking with the difficulty of all the major treatment he has undergone to become the first man to have received two face transplants.
This unprecedented feat was painstakingly carried out by the staff at the Georges-Pompidou European Hospital in Paris, and Laurent Lantieri, a professor of plastic surgery, who led the team through the multi-step procedure.
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It was a strange reunion for patient and doctor as it was Lantieri who carried out the world’s first full face transplant, including tear ducts and eyelids, on Hamon at a hospital outside Paris in July 2010.
Hamon suffers from neurofibromatosis type 1, a genetic mutation which causes severely disfiguring tumours and related complications. His first face transplant in 2010 was a success. But that same year — in order to treat nothing more than a common cold — he was given an antibiotic incompatible with his immunosuppressive treatment.
In 2016 he began to display signs of transplant rejection, and his new face deteriorated.
Last summer Hamon was hospitalized and in November his face, suffering from necrosis, had to be removed. He remained in a hospital without a face for two months, a very difficult time, while a compatible donor was sought.
This exceptional case revealed an exceptional patient. Everyone at the hospital “was blown away by Jerome’s courage, his will, his strength of character in a tragic situation. While he was waiting he never complained, he was even in a good mood,” recalled Bernard Cholley, an anesthetist.
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