PARIS: Where others failed, sometimes spectacularly, French
Surgeon Emmanuel Martinod has helped people whose
windpipes have been ravaged by cancer and other diseases to live and breathe normally again.At least one of his patients, sporting a new trachea, has taken up long-distance running.Since 2009, Martinod and his team at Avicenne Hospital near Paris have carried out more than a dozen trachea transplants using donor aortas reinforced with custom-made internal scaffolding, called stents.Hailed by one US throat
Surgeon as a “major advance”, the reconstructive technique was detailed Sunday in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), and presented at a medical congress in San Diego, California.Previous efforts to rebuild the windpipe and airways
from scratch had focused on using artificial tubes seeded with the patient’s own stem cells.This approach was made famous — and then notorious — by disgraced Italian
Surgeon Paolo Macchiarini, who performed synthetic trachea transplants on eight patients
from 2011 to 2014. Seven died
from complications, and the whereabouts of the eighth is unknown.It was later revealed that Macchiarini falsified results in published studies. Martinod struck on the idea of using aortas — the largest artery in the body —
from deceased donors to replace damaged sections of trachea, the roughly 10-centimetre (four-inch) tube of cartilage and tissue that connect the larnyx to bronchial tubes feeding into the lungs. The thick walls of aortas are designed to withstand a lifetime of pressure, chaneling blood pumped by the heart.
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