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‘World’s first human head transplant carried out on corpse in China in 18-hour operation’

By Chukwuma Muanya, Assistant Editor
20 November 2017   |   4:06 am
The world's first human head transplant has been carried out on a corpse in China, according to Italian professor Sergio Canavero.

Professor Sergio Canavero

The world’s first human head transplant has been carried out on a corpse in China, according to Italian professor Sergio Canavero.

During an 18-hour operation, experts demonstrated that it is possible to successfully reconnect the spine, nerves and blood vessels of a severed head.

A similar operation on a live human will take place ‘imminently’, the controversial professor claims.

In May, scientists carried out a head transplant on a rat in a practise run for controversial human experiment.

Researchers used three rats for each operation: a smaller rat, to be the donor, and two larger rats, acting as the recipient and the blood supply.

To maintain blood flow to the donor brain, they connected the blood vessels from that rat to veins of the third rat using a silicon tube, which was then passed through a peristaltic pump.

Then, once the head had been transplanted onto the second rat’s body, the researchers used vascular grafts to connect the donor’s thoracic aorta and superior vena cava to the carotid artery and extracorporeal veins of the recipient.

Canavero, director of the Turin Advanced Neuromodulation Group, made the announcement at a press conference in Vienna Sunday morning.

The procedure was carried out by a team led by Dr. Xiaoping Ren, who last year grafted a head onto the body of a monkey.

A full report of the Harbin Medical University team’s procedure and a timeframe for the live transplant are expected within the next few days.

Speaking at the press conference, Professor Canavero said: “For too long nature has dictated her rules to us.

“We’re born, we grow, we age and we die. For millions of years humans has evolved and 110 billion humans have died in the process. That’s genocide on a mass scale.

“We have entered an age where we will take our destiny back in our hands. It will change everything. It will change you at every level. The first human head transplant, in the human mode, has been realised.

“The surgery lasted 18 hours. The paper will be released in a few days. Everyone said it was impossible, but the surgery was successful.”

Canavero added that the team’s next step is to perform a full head swap between brain dead organ donors.

“And that is the final step for the formal head transplant for a medical condition which is imminent,” he said. “It will be for a medical, neurological condition, not for life-extension.”

Asked whether the eventual plans for live procedures would go worldwide after initial tests in China, Professor Canavero said: “Given the amount of mean criticism we received I don’t think we should go international.”

In September 2016, the controversial neurosurgeon outlined plans to conduct ‘Frankenstein’ experiments to reanimate human corpses to test his technique.

Canavero and his collaborators discussed trials to test whether it is possible to reconnect the spinal cord of a head to another body with tests that will stimulate the nervous system in fresh human corpses with electrical pulses.

Spiridonov, 31, now accepts his hopes of his head being grafted onto a new healthy body are over.

The aim of the surgery is to first cut the spinal cord and then repair it before using electrical or magnetic stimulation to ‘reanimate’ the nerves and even movement in the corpse.

In an article for the Surgical Neurology International, Dr Canavero and his colleague in South Korea and China drew parallels to the infamous story of Frankenstein, where electricity is used to reanimate the fictional monster.

He pointed to experiments conducted in the 1800s using the corpses of criminals who had been hung as proof such tests could be successful.

In the disturbing experiment, researchers in China affixed the heads of smaller, ‘donor’ rats onto the backs of larger recipients, creating two-headed animals that lived an average of just 36 hours.

The team, which involved Canavero, managed to complete the transplant without causing blood loss-related brain damage to the donor.

In the study, researchers from Harbin Medical University in China and Professor Canavero built upon earlier head-grafting experiments to figure out how to avoid damage to the brain tissue during the operation, as well as long-term immune rejection.

Previously, scientists have attempted the procedure on dogs and monkeys, which helped to test neural preservation when blood flood to the brain had been cut off, they explain in the paper published to CNS Neuroscience & Therapeutics.

But, long-term survival of the specimens was not a priority.

The researchers used three rats for each operation: a smaller rat, to be the donor, and two larger rats, acting as the recipient and the blood supply.

To maintain blood flow to the donor brain, they connected the blood vessels from that rat to veins of the third rat using a silicon tube, which was then passed through a peristaltic pump.

Then, once the head had been transplanted onto the second rat’s body, the researchers used vascular grafts to connect the donor’s thoracic aorta and superior vena cava to the carotid artery and extracorporeal veins of the recipient.

According to the team, there was no injury to the donor brain tissue as a result of blood loss in the experiment.

And, after the surgery, the donor head was still able to blink and feel pain.

The two-headed creatures lived 36 hours on average following the procedure, Business Insider reported.

Still, with the addition of the peristaltic pump and vascular grafting to the technique, the researchers say long-term survival could be a possibility.

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