Thread Rating:
02-23-2014, 02:54 AM
[Image: http://images.nationalgeographic.com/wpf...90x742.jpg]
They're not from some horror movieâthey're real science. The nose-on-the-forehead photo depicts a nose repair in progress in China. Such surgeries are examples of new approaches to standard reconstructive techniques that may cost patients a few months of psychological discomfort but will eventually allow their facial features to be repaired.
Patrick Byrne, director of facial plastic and reconstructive surgery at Johns Hopkins Health Care and Surgery Center in Green Spring Station, Maryland, believes his innovative ear reconstruction pictured in the NEJM was one of the first performed in the world. Growing noses on foreheads or ears on arms before transplanting them to the conventional locations is based on surgical reconstruction techniques going back hundreds of years. But modern-day applications are truly revolutionary, as Byrne explained in an interview with National Geographic News.
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/...l-science/
They're not from some horror movieâthey're real science. The nose-on-the-forehead photo depicts a nose repair in progress in China. Such surgeries are examples of new approaches to standard reconstructive techniques that may cost patients a few months of psychological discomfort but will eventually allow their facial features to be repaired.
Patrick Byrne, director of facial plastic and reconstructive surgery at Johns Hopkins Health Care and Surgery Center in Green Spring Station, Maryland, believes his innovative ear reconstruction pictured in the NEJM was one of the first performed in the world. Growing noses on foreheads or ears on arms before transplanting them to the conventional locations is based on surgical reconstruction techniques going back hundreds of years. But modern-day applications are truly revolutionary, as Byrne explained in an interview with National Geographic News.
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/...l-science/
02-28-2014, 11:14 AM
That's amazing!!
Question: After the transplant is complete, will his nose ever itch again? If it does, will it feel like he's scratching his forehead or his nose?
Question: After the transplant is complete, will his nose ever itch again? If it does, will it feel like he's scratching his forehead or his nose?
02-28-2014, 11:11 PM
I wonder what else they can grow lol
03-03-2014, 12:29 PM
:lmao:
03-04-2014, 05:51 AM
Granny Bear Wrote::lmao:
I asked for some of my friends on here. They were embarrassed to...
Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)