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                  File  British surgeon predicts first full face 
                  transplant within a year            London: 
                  The next one-year might see the announcement of world's 
                  first full face transplant, said the leader of the UK Facial 
                  Transplantation Research Team. It was after the first facial 
                  transplant operation was carried out in the United States that 
                  Professor Peter Butler predicted full face transplant surgery 
                  within a year in UK. In the US surgery, Dr Maria Siemionow, 
                  reconstructive surgeon at The Cleveland Clinic, in Milwaukee, 
                  replaced 80 percent of a woman's face with that of a female 
                  donor. "We congratulate Dr Siemionow and her Cleveland transplantation 
                  team and wish the brave patient well for the future," The Daily 
                  Express quoted Professor Butler as saying. When asked when the 
                  UK team would perform the world's first full facial transplant, 
                  Butler said: "We hope to make an announcement about this within 
                  the next 12 months." The team, which is based at the Royal Free 
                  Hospital in north London, has been granted ethical permission 
                  for a research programme of four facial transplants. The first 
                  partial face transplant in the world was carried out in France 
                  three years ago on a woman who had been mauled by her dog. It 
                  was followed by two other surgeries-a Chinese farmer attacked 
                  by a bear and a European man disfigured by a genetic condition. 
                  However, such transplants are often surrounded by controversy 
                  because they are aimed at improving a patient's quality of life 
                  rather than saving it, and require recipients to take immune-suppressing 
                  drugs for the rest of their life. -Dec 
                  17, 2008
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