얼굴의 반을 다시 찾은 남자 'This is the face I grew up with': Incredible moment a woman sees her dead brother..(VIDEO)

'This is the face I grew up with': Incredible moment a woman sees her dead brother's FACE on another man's body for the first time after life-saving transplant surgery



  • Richard Norris accidentally blew off half his face with a shotgun in 1997
  • Rebekah Aversano's family decided to donate her 21-year-old brother's face for transplant after he died in a car accident
  • She has now met Mr Norris for first time and seen the transplanted face 
  • The resemblance, including skin tone and bone structure, is 'uncanny'
  • The 2012 surgery involved 150 doctors and nurses and took 36 hours
  • Richard had jawbones, teeth, tongue, muscles and nerves replace 
  •  
  • 리처드 노리스(39)는 1997년 총기사고로 얼굴의 반이 없어졌다.

  • 30번에 걸친 수술을 받았지만 얼굴 원래의 모습은 찾을 수가 없었다.
  • 실의 빠져 자살을 시도하기도 했다

  • 레베카 애버사노의 가족은 21살의 나이에 2012년 교통사고로 사망한 그녀의 
  • 오빠의 얼굴을 리처드노리스의 이식 수술을 위해 기부하기로 결정했다.

  • 그녀는 이식 수술 후 처음으로 노리스를 만났다.

  • 오빠의 얼굴을 만져봤다.
  • 피부 색깔과 골격 등이 오빠의 얼굴과 유사해 묘한 느낌이었다.

  • 2012년 150명의 의사와 간호원들이 참여해 36시간의 이식 수술을 했다.

  • 리차드는 턱뼈와 이빨, 혀, 근육, 신경등을 모두 바꾸며 레베카 애버사노의
  • 오빠의 얼굴을 갖게 됐다. 

  • 그는 '생명의 은인'이라 감사해하며 레베카 애버사노와 감격의 포옹을 했다. 

  • by Ki Chul Hwang 

    Conpaper  Editor Distributor @conpaper 

    황기철  콘페이퍼 에디터

  •  

Richard Norris was horribly disfigured almost 18 years ago when he accidentally blew off most his face with a shotgun.


He underwent more than 30 operations to try and correct the damage and restore his features. The long and painful process resulted in little sign of improvement, leaving him depressed and at times suicidal.


Then, three years ago, a tragedy in a different family offered him a glimmer of hope.


Scroll down for video 

Joshua Aversano was killed when hit by a van in 2012. His family donated his face for transplant to shooting victim Richard Norris. The chances of there being a close enough match between facial features of potential transplant donors and recipients is less than 13 per cent

Joshua Aversano (left) was killed when hit by a van in 2012. His family donated his face for transplant to shooting victim Richard Norris (after the transplant, right)

 

Richard Norris, 39, (right) suffered horrific injuries in a shotgun accident in 1997. Rebekah Aversano made the decision in 2012 to donate her dead 21-year-old brother's face for transplant. Their meeting is catalogued by the 60 Minutes Australia crew this Sunday night

Richard Norris, 39, (right) suffered horrific injuries in a shotgun accident in 1997. Rebekah Aversano made the decision in 2012 to donate her dead 21-year-old brother's face for transplant. Their meeting is catalogued by the 60 Minutes Australia crew this Sunday night

 

The family of Joshua Aversano, 21, who was tragically killed in a car accident agreed to consider donating his face for a transplant. The operation transformed Norris' life.


Now, Rebekah Aversano is seeing her brother's face again for the first time - on another man's body.

The amazing union airs on 60 Minutes at 8.30pm on Nine this Sunday, when Rebekah meets the man with her brother's face so he can thank her family for 'saving my life'.


Norris, 39, underwent one of the most complex and expensive face transplants in history, receiving teeth, a jaw and even a tongue from his donor.


As they meet for the first time at his home, Rebekah asks Richard: 'Do you mind if I touch it?'

She does and then steps back in amazement: 'Wow, this is the face I grew up with.'

Richard Norris received the face transplant after the death of Rebekah's brother Joshua, when he was run over in 2012

Richard Norris received the face transplant after the death of Rebekah's brother Joshua, when he was run over in 2012

Emotional embrace between Richard Norris and Rebekah Aversano. On meeting, she asked him:  'Do you mind if I touch it?'

Emotional embrace between Richard Norris and Rebekah Aversano. On meeting, she asked him:  'Do you mind if I touch it?'

His mother, Gwen Aversano, told Canada's CTV News network they knew it was 'the right thing to do'.


'We can definitely see our son in him. Some of the facial features would definitely be our son, so we could see similarities, very much so.'


'We are just so pleased we have been able to help him, even though we had such a tragic loss, we were able to give someone else the benefit of our son.'


And the chances of finding a perfect match were very low. 


Disfigured: When Richard Norris shot himself in the face in 1997 he lost his nose, lips and most movement in his mouth
Disfigured: When Richard Norris shot himself in the face in 1997 he lost his nose, lips and most movement in his mouth

Disfigured: When Richard Norris shot himself in the face in 1997 he lost his nose, lips and most movement in his mouth. The surgery took more than 36 hours

Life saving: Norris, 39, has had multiple life-saving, reconstructive surgeries but none as successful as this by Dr Rodriguez and his 150-strong team

Joshua's family was approached soon after his death with a request to donate his face for transplanting onto Richard Norris. They had already donated his organs

Joshua's family was approached soon after his death with a request to donate his face for transplanting onto Richard Norris. They had already donated his organs

Norris said he is humbled by the gift he received from her late brother after Joshua was killed, struck by a minivan while crossing the street. He speaks to the Maryland family regularly and keeps them updated on his life and health.

'I asked him if it really was worth the risk, he said "absolutely", even though there was a 50 per cent chance it would fail,' she added.

Part of the health battles, included a severe rejection episode when he was sunburnt.  He sent pictures of his face to the team of doctors at the University of Maryland Medical Center, who told him to board a plane without delay. 

'Can I touch it?' Rebekah Aversano (left) meets Richard Norris for the first time since his transplant using the face of her late brother Joshua 

'Can I touch it?' Rebekah Aversano (left) meets Richard Norris for the first time since his transplant using the face of her late brother Joshua 

As they meet for the first time at his home, Rebekah asks Richard: 'Do you mind if I touch it?' She does and then steps back in amazement: 'Wow, this is the face I grew up with'

As they meet for the first time at his home, Rebekah asks Richard: 'Do you mind if I touch it?' She does and then steps back in amazement: 'Wow, this is the face I grew up with'

 

He spent three weeks recovering from the episode in hospital.


The 36-hour hour operation was considered extremely controversial, as it was elective surgery, and Norris only had a 50 per cent chance of survival'.


The result, however, was not only a new life for him, but a groundbreaking study for doctors learning to treat soldiers and other victims of severe facial injuries.


Norris was only 22 when his face 'exploded'.


The story goes that he had arrived home after drinking and was arguing with his mother when he took a shotgun from his gun cabinet and told his mom he was going to shoot himself.


Each day became a living nightmare for Norris as he faced cruelty from strangers whenever he ventured outdoors, fought addiction and contemplated suicide.

  

Dr Rodriguez led a 150-strong team in a 36 hour operation to transplant the new face on Richard Norris

Dr Rodriguez led a 150-strong team in a 36 hour operation to transplant the new face on Richard Norris

An MRI image of Richard Lee Norris re-constructed face transplant after being shot in the face
An MRI following the reconstruction and transplant

An MRI image of Richard Lee Norris re-constructed face transplant after being shot in the face (left) and the image following the reconstruction and transplant (at right)

 

'You saved my life'. Norris hugs Rebekah Aversano, sister of Joshau, the 21-year-old whose face was donated to him by the family for transplant

'You saved my life'. Norris hugs Rebekah Aversano, sister of Joshau, the 21-year-old whose face was donated to him by the family for transplant

 

The accident left Norris with no teeth, no nose and only part of his tongue. He was still able to taste but could not smell. 

'Those 10 years of hell I lived through, it has given me such a wealth of knowledge,' Norris told Associated Press.

'I've heard all kinds of remarks. A lot of them were really horrible.


'It's unreal. It has put some of the best people in my life.' 


The doctor who performed the operation at the Maryland Medical Centre, Dr Eduardo Rodriguez, said when Norris opted to undergo the face-transplant intense procedure, he was agreeing to take on an enormous responsibility.

He said, the face isn't an organ like a liver or a heart, which are regularly transplanted.


The face is more like a hand or foot, and Richard Norris' body will always regard his new face as a foreign object, causing his immune system to constantly attack it.


He will take a cocktail of anti-rejection drugs for the rest of his life, lowering his immune system and leaving him vulnerable to many health problems.


He is also not allowed to drink, smoke, get sunburned or risk injury, all of which will only worsen the rejection.

A serious rejection results in death.


'He never really thought about himself in all of this,' Dr Rodriguez told GQ magazine.

'He's always thought about helping the wounded warriors and the other people, and providing hope. 

'He's a remarkable man.' 


Before, whenever he ventured out in public, usually at night, he hid behind a hat and mask.

Norris had dozens of previous surgeries to try and repair his face, but eventually reached the limits of what conventional surgery could do for him, said Dr Rodriguez. 


And it was that just weeks after Norris was told by another doctor that there was little else that could be done for him, Dr Rodriguez presented him with another option: a transplant. 


Grateful: Richard Norris sits in the office of Dr. Eduardo Rodriguez, who led the surgical team that performed the face transplant. He undergoes regular checks because of the fear of his body rejecting the new face

Grateful: Richard Norris sits in the office of Dr. Eduardo Rodriguez, who led the surgical team that performed the face transplant. He undergoes regular checks because of the fear of his body rejecting the new face

Dr Eduardo Rodriguez inspects Norris' skin. In the years since a shotgun accident blew half of Norris' face off, he faced cruelty from strangers, fought addiction and contemplated suicide

Dr Eduardo Rodriguez inspects Norris' skin. In the years since a shotgun accident blew half of Norris' face off, he faced cruelty from strangers, fought addiction and contemplated suicide

When Norris saw his new face in a mirror for the first time, he wrote: 'The only thing I could do was hug Dr. Rodriguez'

When Norris saw his new face in a mirror for the first time, he wrote: 'The only thing I could do was hug Dr. Rodriguez'

 

The doctor, who is the chair of the plastic surgery department at NYU Langone Medical Centre, had been following advancements in the face transplant field for years.


A Naval Research grant, for the purpose of helping wounded warriors made it possible for him and his team to attempt their first face transplant, an operation that previously had been performed only twice in the US.


The world's first partial face transplant was performed in France in 2005 on a woman who was mauled by her dog.

Of 27 other transplants that followed, four recipients have died.


Norris has had two serious episodes since the 2012 operation, and spent weeks in hospital on intravenous medication. 


For the first time in many years, Richard recognises himself when he looks in the mirror and this Sunday night meets the woman who made the decision to allow him the face transplant

For the first time in many years, Richard recognises himself when he looks in the mirror and this Sunday night meets the woman who made the decision to allow him the face transplant

 

The rejection was the major danger in the first place. However, once Dr Rodriguez and his team began, there was no turning back.


If the transplant didn't take, there would have been nothing left of his face and he would have died. 

Norris' mother, Sandra, remembers Dr Rodriguez saying there was a 50-50 chance her son would survive the surgery. 


'We looked at Richard and we told him we loved him the way he was and it didn't matter to us, but it was his life,' she said. 'That was what he wanted to do and we supported him.' 


Dr Rodriguez said if all goes well, a transplanted face could last 20 to 30 years.


Norris, who makes daily visual checks, gains more feeling in his new face as each day passes but the risk of rejection is never far from his mind.


'Every day I wake up with that fear: Is this the day? The day I'm going to go into a state of rejection that is going to be so bad that the doctors can't change it?'


Before the transplant, Norris rarely left his home. In addition to wearing a surgical mask and baseball cap on his infrequent trips out in public, he did his shopping at night so he wouldn't have to face the stares of as many people.

'I am now able to walk past people and no one even gives me a second look.'


See the full story on 60 Minutes at 8.30pm on Nine this Sunday (Australia)

 


edited by kcontents


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