|  This program, which would be the 11th in the nation, builds on a 
			long-standing history of successful replantation, or reattachment, 
			of amputated digits, hands and upper extremities by the plastic and 
			reconstructive hand surgeons at SIU, said Dr. Michael W. Neumeister. 
			He is professor and chair of SIU's Department of Surgery, Elvin G. 
			Zook Endowed Chair in Plastic Surgery, and surgical director of the 
			Hand Transplant Program at SIU School of Medicine. The Memorial Medical Center Foundation provided a $2.8 million 
			grant to establish the program. The grant is expected to cover the 
			majority of costs for up to five patients over three years. Between 6,000 and 10,000 upper extremity amputations occur each 
			year in the United States, and over 1,200 soldiers have lost a limb 
			as a result of explosions in Iraq and Afghanistan. It is estimated 
			that over 1.3 million people in the United States currently have 
			some form of amputation.  Since microsurgery was initiated at SIU School of Medicine in the 
			early 1980s, plastic surgery has reattached many amputated fingers 
			and hands, Neumeister said. Unfortunately not all amputated limbs 
			are salvageable, and these patients are destined to live as amputees 
			with or without the use of various prosthetics. Although prosthetics 
			can be extremely useful, they do have their limitations, costs and 
			poor ability to provide sensation, he said.  
			 The first long-term successful hand transplant was performed in 
			Louisville, Ky., in 1999. Nearly 100 hands have been subsequently 
			transplanted worldwide, with an overall five-year allograft survival 
			rate of around 90 percent, compared with 75 percent in kidney 
			transplants.  Hand transplantation can be technically very challenging and may 
			last from 12 to 24 hours while bones, blood vessels, tendons, 
			muscles, nerves and skin are meticulously repaired, Neumeister said. 
			Patients subsequently require significant monitoring of their 
			immunosuppressive (anti-rejection) medications as well as intense 
			physical therapy to regain function of the transplanted upper 
			extremity.  "Given the significant upper extremity trauma and number of 
			amputations treated by SIU Plastic Surgery as well as the experience 
			of transplantation at Memorial Medical Center, which has over 40 
			years of kidney/pancreas transplant experience, we are uniquely 
			qualified and poised to offer hand transplantation within the 
			Midwest," Neumeister said. Hand transplantation is an option for people who have lost one or 
			both hands below the elbow and may even be beneficial for some 
			above-elbow amputees. The goal is to restore hand function and 
			sensation as well as a state of wholeness to the body.  It should only be considered by those who have attempted to use 
			prosthetics but continue to have significant disability despite 
			their use. Candidates for the procedure should also be in overall 
			good health and be willing to comply with the medication and 
			rehabilitation protocols after surgery.  
			[to top of second column] | 
 
				 "Because these patients will be receiving a deceased person's 
				tissue, they will be similar to other transplant patients and 
				will require lifelong immunosuppression (anti-rejection) 
				medications," said Dr. Bradford West, medical director of SIU's 
				hand transplant program and chair of nephrology at Springfield 
				Clinic. West also serves as medical director of the Alan G. 
				Birtch, MD, Center for Pancreas and Kidney Transplant Program 
				and Surgery Services at Memorial Medical Center. "In contrast to other organ transplant patients, there is an 
			added level of complexity to finding the right hand transplant donor 
			since additional matching criteria are required, such as gender, 
			ethnicity, skin color and tone, and size," said West. "Despite these 
			obstacles, there is a quality-of-life benefit that outweighs the 
			risks for some patients who desire a higher level of functioning and 
			a more natural look and feel." The Hand Transplant Program is a multidisciplinary endeavor that 
			includes SIU School of Medicine, Memorial Transplant Services and 
			Springfield Clinic Transplant Nephrology. Team members include 
			plastic surgeons, transplant surgeons, orthopedic surgeons, and 
			specialists in transplant nephrology, infectious disease, 
			pharmacology, psychiatry, pathology, anesthesia, radiology, 
			neurology, ethics and hand therapy. The success of the Hand Transplant Program will require 
			appropriate amputee candidates and donors of the limb to be 
			transplanted. All patients who receive a hand transplant will have 
			undergone extensive testing and matching to try to prevent 
			rejection, West said. The overriding goal of the program is to return amputees to their 
			pre-amputation productive life without the need of a prosthetic 
			limb.  The SIU Hand Transplant Program is a research study that has been 
			approved by the Springfield Committee for Research Involving Human 
			Subjects (IRB 12-811). Patients who meet the basic eligibility 
			requirements and wish to be considered should contact the clinical 
			research coordinator at 1-855-SIU-HAND (1-855-748-4263) or
			handtransplant@siumed.edu 
			for an initial evaluation. For more information, see
			
			www.siumed.edu/handtransplant. 
			[Text from file received from
Memorial Health System]
 
			
			 |