Xi'an - China's first facial transplant patient was discharged Friday after
undergoing successful surgery in Xijing Hospital in northwest China's Shaanxi
Province.
Patient Li Guoxing returned home Friday for a week-long visit to his family
in southwest China's Yunnan Province. He has not seen his wife and two children
since he entered hospital.
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 Li Guoxing, who
received China's first face transplant, looks at himself in a mirror as a
doctor gives him an optical check in Xijing Hospital in Xi'an, capital of
Shaanxi Province April 25, 2006. [Newsphoto/file]
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The 30-year old patient, whose face was terribly disfigured in 2004 after an
attack by a bear, received a partial face transplant operation at the hospital
in April, the second operation of its kind following a French female patient
last year.
During the 14-hour procedure that ended on April 14, Li was given a new
cheek, upper lip, nose and an eyebrow, all from a single donor.
The transplanted part of his face is alive and Li has been doing well, said
Guo Shuzhong, director of the hospital's plastic surgery department who directed
the operation.
Before leaving the hospital in Xi'an, Li, wearing blue-black clothes,
attended a news briefing held specifically for his departure.
The swelling on the transplanted part of his face has now almost disappeared,
making his face seem more natural.
Looking cheerful, Li spoke to reporters in simple Chinese. Prior to coming
for surgery, he could only speak the dialect of his Lisu ethnic minority.
He expressed thanks to the doctors and nurses of the hospital in standard
Chinese, and said he was "very happy to go home".
His upper lip now has a small mustache and some acne has appeared on the
right part of his face in the past few days. Guo said all this showed that he
was recovering well.
Two doctors accompanied Li to his home, a mountainous village in Yunnan. They
first flew to Kunming, the provincial capital, and continued from there by bus.
Given the poor living and medical conditions in his hometown, Li will return
to the hospital after the seven-day visit, according to Guo.
Further plastic surgery will be carried out in two or three weeks, to make
the right part of his face, his lips and eyes seem more natural, according to
Guo.
Because Li is very poor, the hospital is paying all his treatment fees, Guo
said.
The Natural Conservancy, a leading US-based nonprofit organization, which
studied the living conditions of black bears in Yunnan, helped Li apply for the
surgery.
Surgeons in France carried out the world's first such operation on
38-year-old Isabelle Dinoire whose lips and nose were ripped off by a
dog.