Louisville Medicine Volume 66, Issue 8 | Page 25

PLASTIC SURGERY Fig. 3. Diligent efforts of the recipient achieved excellent function. liver and multi-visceral organ transplants, when the abdominal cavity is too small to accommodate the transplanted organs. This is life-saving in these cases, and recipients would need immunosup- pression anyway for their visceral organs. Over 30 such transplants have now been done. PENIS TRANSPLANTS With techniques perfected in South Africa, penis transplants are now being done at Massachusetts General Hospital and Johns Hopkins Hospital for injuries coming from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan due to improvised explosive devices. These programs are funded by the Department of Defense and are highly advocated by injured veterans. A few children have now been fathered by penis transplant recipients. UTERINE TRANSPLANTS Uterine transplants carry mucosa and endometrium, rather than skin. At this time, this field is the most rapidly growing in VCA. To date, there have been 50 uterine transplants, with over 10 healthy children delivered, all by caesarean section. The most active pro- gram is in Sweden, with several programs recently established in the United States. To avoid the risks of long-term immunosup- pression, recipients are limited to two children, and the uterus is then explanted. include transplants of the larynx/trachea, tongue, peripheral nerve, knee/femur, and leg/foot. THE ENDURING LOUISVILLE CONTRIBUTIONS Breakthroughs in immune science to eliminate the need for lifelong immunosuppression will likely be the key to the future of VCA. In whatever manner the field evolves, the enduring contributions of the Louisville program will be more than pioneering and performing the first long-term success of a skin-bearing transplant. The endur- ing contributions will include the intense ethical focus guiding the effort, and the careful patient selection process used. Dr. Gordon Tobin is a professor at the University of Louisville School of Medicine, Department of Surgery, Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery. He practices with UofL Physicians-Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery. Dr. Christopher Jones is a practicing transplant surgeon specialist with UofL Physicians. Dr. Christina L. Kaufman is the Executive Director of the Christine M. Kleinert Institute for Hand and Microsurgery (CMKI).  She is an Assistant Professor in the Division of Hand Surgery at the University of Louisville.   OTHER VCA A number of other VCA’s have been done in small numbers. These JANUARY 2019 23