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Groundbreaking Stem Cell Surgery Gives Boy New Cheekbones

Genetic Defect Causes Underdeveloped Facial Bones, Tissues

By DAN HARRIS and SUZAN CLARKE

Oct. 12, 2009

 

Brad Guilkey, 15, was born without cheekbones and, for him, a typical sporting activity such as basketball carries tremendous risks.

 

15-year-old's rare genetic condition left him without some of his face bones.

Brad suffers from Treacher Collins syndrome, a rare genetic disorder in which the bones and other tissues in the face don't develop.

So, for Brad, a shot to the face during a game of basketball could crush his eyeball. His mother, Christine Guilkey, said the lack of bone meant the lack of vital protection.

But the Cincinnati teen has undergone groundbreaking experimental surgery that is allowing him to grow new cheekbones, a procedure that could help others who have lost bone as a result of similar genetic conditions or traumatic injuries.

Brad had an experimental eight-hour operation in May at the Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, where doctors implanted cadaver bone into his face. They then injected Brad's own stem cells into the donor bone.

From a medical standpoint, the results were miraculous.

"Lo and behold, the bone has come back to life," said Dr. Jesse Taylor of the Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center. "I've been really pleasantly surprised by the results of this."

Brad now has solid bone in his cheeks, and said on "Good Morning America" today that he's happy with the results.

Taylor said the surgery could have significant implications for millions of people.

"Certainly, as we're engaged in conflicts abroad, more and more young men and women come back with really severe facial disfigurement from a lack of bone," he said.

Statistics on the Disorder

People with Treacher Collins syndrome typically have eyes that slant downward, as well as absent, small or unusually formed ears, according to the National Institutes of Health. They have sparse eyelashes and some even have eye abnormalities that can lead to vision loss.

The disorder affects about 1 in 50,000 people, according to the National Institutes of Health.

Many reconstructive surgeries that use implanted material often have high failure rates because the recipients' bodies reject the donor material. In Brad's case, though, there is no rejection risk because the his own cell's are growing in the cadaver bone.

 

 

 

Brad Guilkey, 15, who was born without cheekbones, is shown, left, before a surgery to help him grow cheekbones, and after, right.

(ABC News)

 

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Amazing isn't it.



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So, during the surgery, they cut his hair, changed its color, and gave him a lot more acne?



 

 

Which is before and which is after?



Kimi wa ne tashika ni ano toki watashi no soba ni ita

Itsudatte itsudatte itsudatte

Sugu yoko de waratteita

Nakushitemo torimodosu kimi wo

I will never leave you

MontanaHatchet said:
So, during the surgery, they cut his hair, changed its color, and gave him a lot more acne?

I would imagine that those photos were taken a couple of months apart. He did go through major reconstructive surgery after all, it would take time to recover.



Amazing, i again bow down to science. I just continue to become amazed with new discoeries and uses it makes me look at the evidence and think that the possibilities are endless.



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poor guy :(




incredible, it's great science allows us to do things like this



I think it really says something that this happened in the US despite Bush being stingy with the federal money for stem cell reashearch. (basically giving none out.)

The rest of the world needs to step up in funding some medical technology.



Kasz216 said:

I think it really says something that this happened in the US despite Bush being stingy with the federal money for stem cell reashearch. (basically giving none out.)

The rest of the world needs to step up in funding some medical technology.

I actually made a post along the lines of this in the Science/politics thread. The UK spends so little on new science and technology like this and yet it wants to become a world leader. It's not like it's a bad investment, you can stand to make a good return on medical research both socially and financially.



highwaystar101 said:
Kasz216 said:

I think it really says something that this happened in the US despite Bush being stingy with the federal money for stem cell reashearch. (basically giving none out.)

The rest of the world needs to step up in funding some medical technology.

I actually made a post along the lines of this in the Science/politics thread. The UK spends so little on new science and technology like this and yet it wants to become a world leader. It's not like it's a bad investment, you can stand to make a good return on medical research both socially and financially.

Yeah, i've read somewhere the US spends more on medical research then the rest of the world combined.

Which is pretty sad considering that the EU is a bigger economy then the US.

Obama fairly recently pledged the US would spend ATLEAST 3% of it's GDP on science.