Dec 22, 2008 12:40 PM
One of the four people known to have received a partial face transplant has died, according to published reports.
Li Guoxing, 32, died in July at his home in southwestern China after taking herbal medicines instead of immune-suppressing drugs typically used to prevent recipients from rejecting donated tissue, his surgeon, Guo Shuzhong, told Agence-France Presse over the weekend. Li's death had been rumored for months on Chinese blogs, AFP notes.
"His death was not caused by the surgery. Our operation was a success," Guo told AFP. "But we cannot rule out a connection with the immune system drugs."
He added that herbal medicines Li was taking may have caused liver damage. Guo didn't specify which herbs Li was using but said doctors had prescribed him immune-suppressing meds.
About half of Li's face was replaced in 2006 after it was mauled by a bear while he was out hunting. Li was only the second person known to have undergone the risky, experimental procedure at the time, during which skin and other facial tissue is transplanted from a deceased donor onto the injured face of a recipient.
Two partial face transplants have been performed in France. Doctors at Ohio's Cleveland Clinic reported last week that they'd conducted the fourth, on an unidentified woman.
Shanghai-based photographer Ryan Pyle has posted a slide show of Li that he shot last year.
Image of Li Guoxing by STR/AFP/Getty Images
Tags:
China,
face transplant
More News Blog:
Next: Allergy Relief: real-time pollen updates may be on the way
Previous: Rubber duckie, you're the one--If only we could find you in the Arctic ice, says NASA
Deadline: Aug 31 2013
Reward: $100,000 USD
The Geoffrey Beene Foundation Alzheimer’s Initiative (GBFAI) is launching the 2013 Geoffrey Beene Global NeuroDiscovery Challenge whose
Deadline: Jun 29 2013
Reward: $7,000 USD
The Seeker for this Challenge desires proposals for chemical methods that could rapidly degrade a dilute aqueous solution
Powered By: 
Comments
Add Comment