Next story about a woman with a face transplant: Amazing!

" Amazing ". It was the feeling of Isabelle Dinoire, 38, when she saw her new face.

Picture 1 of Next story about a woman with a face transplant: Amazing! The voice is weak and unclear because the lips are still numb, the first woman in the world to have a face transplant answered the phone with the Daily Mail reporter: ' When I look at the new face in the mirror, I accept It's right out there. It was amazing to see the nose and mouth on my face . ' Not only Dinoire, anyone who knew her face before surgery had the same feeling of surprise.

The face of a single woman with two children was completely deformed after being attacked by a dog. The chin and nose part were torn, bone-cut, so terrible that her daughter was also "unbearable". She herself did not dare to hang mirrors in her home and had to wear a dental mask when going out on the street.

Children are also afraid

After the accident, she lost many friends. Sometimes she even thought about suicide. And as an arrangement of fate, her face donor was a woman who died of suicide. Now that the face is fresh, the red scars are fading. Mrs. Dinoire said that she could be more reassured about her future, no longer feeling inferior, looking disgusted with disgust. The more she respects her new face, the more grateful she is for the face-giving family and wants to know who they are. However, doctors think it is best that she not know about the identity of the face in the mirror.

Over the past days, Mrs. Dinoire kept looking at the new face in the mirror while lying in wait for recovery in the hospital. It is important now, not only for herself, but also for world medicine: when she will feel the part of her face. She told the stories of doctors examining in the postoperative period: 'They told me to close my eyes and then click on the areas on my face to see if I felt it. I have not felt it now because the nerves are not working properly. The doctors said my face will feel back after about six months to a year, but they are not sure because this is the first case. '

Just hope to live normally

Since the day of surgery (November 27), Ms. Dinoire has become the focus of attention all over the world. Earlier last week, she had a call for journalists to respect her private life. Information posted too much made her feel like she was "bombarded".

Currently, she is very afraid to leave the hospital when she imagines (surely will) the curious people will gather and look at the pointing. And so many questions are waiting for the answer: How will relatives look at her? What do those familiar with the late owner of her face carry? Dinoire only hoped: 'I just hope to live a normal life'.

Meanwhile, information about Mrs. Dinoire and the surgeon agreeing with a British documentary filmmaker to record the entire operation worried many people. Some medical experts believe that these videos will make many other doctors conduct similar tests, not because of the progress of the surgery but because of money or fame.

But many people show sympathy for Mrs. Dinoire. They explained that the filming agreement was aimed at earning her income during the hospital stay awaiting recovery (Mrs. Dinoire would receive about $ 235,000 from the sale of photos and documentaries about the surgery).

Rosamond Rhodes, a professor of medicine at Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York, admits: 'Although the cost of her medicine is fully provided by the French medical system, try to imagine how the woman This can go to work after the accident, while lying at Edouard-Herriot Hospital (Lyon) waiting for recovery as well as in the period of seeking work ahead '.

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