Thursday, August 25, 2016

Patrick Hardison: One Year After Rare Face Transplant





Patrick Hardison was a volunteer firefighter in small-town Mississippi when the accident happened. A house was in flames, with a person trapped, and the roof collapsed just after Hardison raced inside. His helmet was knocked off; he felt his mask melting. He closed his eyes and jumped out the window.

The young man lost his eyelids, ears, lips, most of his nose and his hair that day. He also had disfiguring third-degree burns across his entire face, head, neck and upper torso. His skin was so badly damaged that he was not even able to close his eyes completely.

 "From that day on, Sept. 5, 2001, there was no normal tissue left throughout his face," Eduardo D. Rodriguez, chair of plastic surgery at New York University's Langone Medical Center, said in recounting the first responder's story. In a press conference on Monday, the medical center announced that Hardison, now 41 and a father of five, had undergone the world's most extensive face transplant to date.

The donor was a young BMX cyclist from Ohio named David Rodebaugh, whose family donated his liver, kidneys, and both eyes to help other patients. A representative from LiveOnNY, which works to match donors with recipients in the New York metropolitan area, said his mother didn't hesitate when asked about the face transplant and called her son "a free spirit who loved life." Rodebaugh died in July when he crashed and hit his head while riding in Brooklyn. He was 26 - virtually the same age as Hardison was when he was injured.

 The years following the fire were full of dark, horrific pain. Hardison underwent more than 70 surgeries that involved multiple grafts from his leg to his face. Yet he was still very disfigured - with "no semblance of normal anatomy," as Rodriguez put it - and had to hide behind sunglasses and a baseball cap whenever he went out.

Talking or eating was excruciating. A friend at Hardison's church heard about the work Rodriguez had done at the University of Maryland Medical Center for another man whose face had been damaged and contacted the surgeon on his behalf.

Hardison became a patient of Rodriguez's while the doctor was at UMMC and continued to work with him after he was recruited to join NYU Langone. The transplant operation, which took place Aug. 14, was funded by a grant from NYU Langone. The hospital estimates it cost between $850,000 and $1 million.

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