Patients waiting for a face donation can be called into the hospital for surgery at any time. Facial transplant surgery typically takes 12-36 hours, depending on how much and which parts of the face need to be restored. After surgery, you will be placed in a surgical intensive care unit (SICU) for about one week.

Is full face transplant possible?

A team of surgeons has successfully performed a face transplant for a 26-year-old man who had a self-inflicted gun injury. The team used facial skin from a donor to replace much of the man’s face, as well as partially replacing his bone structure.

How much does face transplant cost?

The first U.S. face transplant cost about $350,000 – a fee comparable to or less than the cost of traditional reconstructive surgeries for severe facial wounds, CNNhealth.com reports.

Do hand transplants exist?

Hand transplant is a treatment option for people who have had one or both hands amputated. In a hand transplant, you receive one or two donor hands and a portion of the forearms from a person who has died. Hand transplants are specialized procedures performed in only a few transplant centers worldwide.

How is Katie Stubblefield now?

The family is reportedly still living in the Ronald McDonald house. Katie’s parents Rob and Alesia oversee everything with Katie, from her therapy to her anti-rejection medications. They told The Nightline that even through this ordeal, Katie has not lost her sense of humour.

What happened to Richard Norris’ face?

For fifteen years, Richard Norris had a face too hideous to show. Then, one day, a maverick doctor gave him a miracle too fantastic to believe. Richard got a face transplant, a new life, and a new set of burdens too strange to predict. What’s it like to live with a face that wasn’t yours—and that may never quite be?

How did they fix Richard’s face?

Rodriguez removed what was left of Richard’s disfigured face, dissected down to the skull. He attached the new face midway back on Richard’s scalp. He stabilized it with screws, tapped the jaw together, and finally draped the skin and sewed it down like a patch on a coat or a pair of jeans.

What did Rodriguez do to make Richard normal?

He promised Richard he would make him normal. Over the next few years, Rodriguez performed dozens of surgeries using Richard’s own flesh, fashioning a nose-shaped appendage out of tissue from his forearm and a small chin out of flesh from his legs, but these crude approximations failed to make Richard normal.