Successful head transplant surgery for one-year-old boys

The first joint surgery for a one-year-old boy with a traffic accident has been successfully conducted in Australia.

Successful pairing for boys over 1 year old

A 16-month-old boy named Jaxon Taylor, along with his mother and sister, had a traffic accident when a car driving at 112km / hour rushed into their car.

Picture 1 of Successful head transplant surgery for one-year-old boys

Picture 2 of Successful head transplant surgery for one-year-old boys

Picture 3 of Successful head transplant surgery for one-year-old boys
Jaxon must wear the skull positioning frame for eight weeks to fix the bone.(Photo: mirror).

According to The Sun newspaper, a serious accident caused the cervical vertebrae C1 and C2, along with Jaxon's collarbone, to break, leaving the head of the boy inside to leave his neck.

Fox News said the surgeon Geoff Askin and his colleagues reconnected the vertebrae to Jaxon after six hours of surgery. The doctors resumed vertebrae using a piece of copper wire, then took Jaxon's ribs to pair the boy's vertebrae together.

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Baby Jason with his father.(Photo: Mirror).

Askin said: 'Many children cannot survive in the first place, if they can overcome the surgery, they cannot move or breathe as usual after waking up .' According to Askin, baby Jaxon is the heaviest case he has ever seen.

Jaxon is still wearing a skull positioning frame to fix the bones. The Jaxon family calls this 'aura' that covers their children. The doctor said that after eight weeks Jaxon can live normally and stay healthy.