Faces
matter. They tell the world who we are and where we come from. They reveal
our individuality, our genetics, emotions and ethnicity. But faces
are also 'matter,' a composite of tissues, muscles and nerves that can be
changed by cosmetics, art and surgery. Face transplants are no longer
science fiction, which they were in 1997 when Face/Off hit the
cinemas, starring John Travolta and Nicholas Cage and directed by John
Woo. Since 2005, it has been possible to perform face transplants, in
which the face of a dead donor is overlaid on the body of a recipient. That
recipient will more than likely have undergone some traumatic event or
accident, and multiple reconstructive surgeries before receiving a new face.
What must it be like to wake up as someone else? To have to learn to speak,
eat, smile and inhabit a totally different visage? What would it be like for
your family? Or for the family of the donor, constantly looking for and hoping
to find (or not to find) an essence of their loved one.
I
have been thinking a lot about these kinds of questions. I'm writing a history
of face transplants from the 1950s to the present, focusing especially on post
2005, when the 38-year old French woman Isabelle
Dinoire became the first face transplant recipient. Hers was a partial
transplant; her nose, chin and lips had been lost when she was savaged by her
pet dog. Isabelle was unconscious at the time, having argued with her daughter
and taken an overdose of sleeping tablets. Whether or not it was a deliberate
overdose has proved contentious: could she have given true, informed consent
for a face transplant when she was depressed enough to commit suicide? When she
couldn't possibly have known what the world had in store for her?
As
it turned out, the world was very interested. The hospital that treated her
released pre- and post- operative photos. The media immediately picked up the
story: they wanted details from her neighbours, her friends. They wanted to
know what it was like to have someone else's face; what it was like for her
family and the family of the donor. They discussed whether she would be able to
kiss, to have a new relationship, to return to her old existence. Life was
never the same again for Isabelle. She remained dependent on her doctors and
did not return to full time work. She constantly watched her skin for signs of
tissue rejection. She lived with a face that she described as half her own and
half somebody else's. When Isabelle died of cancer in 2016, her doctors denied
it was in any way connected to the cocktail of immunosuppressant drugs she had
been taking - though those drugs are known to increase the risk of cancer. I have
written in detail about Dinoire elsewhere. Her case is important - not just
because of her own experiences as a female patient undertaking a cutting-edge
technique, but also because it draws attention to the limits and obligations of
what has been called 'Frankenstein science'. Where do we draw the line in
medical experimentation? What can and can't be transplanted? Who decides?
I
have not included images of Isabelle Dinoire in this blog post, since some
readers might find them upsetting. But they are widely available online. So,
too, are images of her surgeons, Bernard Devauchelle and Jean-Michel Dubernard,
who also performed the first hand transplant. The hand transplant was not
ultimately a success, because Clint Hallam, the recipient, could not bear
living with it or dealing with the possibility of tissue rejection that
occurred. For transplants to hold, massive amounts of immunosuppressants must
be taken. Doctors are experimenting with alternative methods, but to date these
have been unsuccessful.
The history of face transplants is a history of
experimentation, of trying to master the complexities of the different tissues
making up the face.
People with transplanted faces do not gain full facial mobility, so in addition
to belonging to the realms of both the living and the dead, they are both
healed and not healed. Isabelle Dinoire said that she felt like a 'monster'
before her operation, when her wounds were visible and like a 'circus freak'
afterwards, when everybody knew that she was the first face transplant
recipient. Other people's responses to disfigurement and transplantation are
hugely important. Face transplant surgery can be traced back to World War I and
to the development of plastic and reconstructive techniques as a consequence of
soldiers being wounded in ways and numbers never before seen.
Another
History Girl, Louisa Young, has written beautifully on questions of facial
reconstructive surgery and social rehabilitation in My
dear I wanted to tell you and the follow-up novels, The
Heroes' Welcome and Devotion. I first met Louisa in 2006,
when we were both contributing to the Wellcome Trust's first public exhibition,
which was on hearts. Louisa had written her glorious Book
of the Heart and I was working on a history monograph, Matters
of the Heart: History, Medicine, Emotion. Eleven years later, by a
wonderful serendipity, I find myself working on the history of face transplants
soon after the publication of My Dear, I have something to tell
you.
Maybe
that isn't such a coincidence as it might appear. After all, hearts and faces
have a lot in common. I became interested in the history of transplants because
of what they tell us about our bodies - and how we feel about them. Heart transplant patients
often claim they have received more than a stranger's heart; stories
abound of people's personality or even their cravings and abilities changing as
a result. Transplants are gifts, from one person to another (at least in the UK
where donors are not paid). They provoke a range of emotional responses:
fear of having a new organ, disgust that organ is assimilated into their own
bodies, gratitude to the donor, guilt that s/he has died while the recipient
lives on, and so on. Isabelle expressed both revulsion that her tongue touched
the dead lips of her donor as well as gratitude for her new face. There is an
added poignancy to the fact that Dinoire's donor was a young woman who
committed suicide. In life as in death, the two were linked together
forever.
1 comment:
Thought provoking post.
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