Off-limits for transplants? Brains, eyes, testes

Health 11:28 28.04.2018
Since the world's first successful organ transplant in 1954 -- a kidney -- the discipline has advanced to the point where a wounded soldier could have his penis and scrotum replaced in a groundbreaking operation last month.
 
A Frenchman recently became the first person to receive a second face transplant after the first failed, and another made history by regrowing skin lost over 95 percent of his body, thanks to a graft from his twin brother.
 
Transplants are no longer limited to the vital organs: heart, liver, orlungs. Nowadays, people can get a new hand... or even a uterus.
 
But some organs remain off-limits. For now.
 
Brain swap 
 
Topping the list, brain transplants are a long way off, for both technical and ethical reasons, experts say.
 
"The most challenging organ to transplant is anything related to the nervous system, as we do not have effective techniques for nerve growth/regeneration," explained transplant surgeon David Nasralla, of the University of Oxford.
 
"For this reason, eye and brain transplants are currently beyond the scope of modern medicine," he told AFP.
 
Nerves carry messages through the body in the form of electrochemical pulses flitting between the brain and spinal cord, muscles and other organs.
 
An Italian-Chinese surgical duo recently set the science world aflutter by announcing they planned to remove a person's head and attach it to a decapitated donor body in what would be the first such procedure.
 
There is a high likelihood, observers say, that the patient will die.
 
Many doubt it is possible to connect the nerve fibres of two spinal cords.
 
Above all else, the undertaking raises troubling moral questions, including a very basic one: What constitutes a person? A brain alone?
 
The patient, suggested a recent article in the journal Surgical Neurology International, will likely struggle with the concept of "human identity".
 
"Even memories of the role the former body played in the creation of the subject's identity would encounter possible conflict with a new donor-given body," wrote bio-ethicists Anto Cartolovni and Antonio Spagnolo.
 
"Similar issues were also seen in cases of face and hand transplants. This confusion to the person's psychological state could possibly lead to serious psychological problems, namely insanity and finally death."
 
Fancy a pig heart?
 
Given the dire shortage of donor organs, the use of animal hearts, lungs or livers to save human lives has long been a holy grail of medical science.
 
But organ rejection has stood stubbornly in the way of inter-species "xenotransplants".
 
"It was tried in the 50s and 60s, with kidneys from chimpanzees, for example. But organ failure set in immediately, within days. They could not break through the species barrier," said Olivier Bastien, of France's biomedicine agency.
 
This is changing as scientists learn to modify the genes that prompt the immune system to attack intruder germs, but also foreign tissue perceived as a threat.
 
Researchers' focus is to modify the genes of donor animals so their organs will resist the human immune response, while also preventing the transfer of animal diseases.
 
Animal welfare is an added concern.
 
"Up to what point should we undermine the animal's immune system", asks Bastien -- potentially exposing it to disease and suffering so we can harvest its organs?
 
Are there limits?
 
Few organs remain technically non-transplantable. But two are excluded, for now, due to their raising of ethical eyebrows -- the testes and ovaries.
 
"A testicle transplant would amount to assisted reproduction in disguise," said Bastien.
 
One question is this: If the recipient fathers children with his new sperm-producing testicles, whose offspring are they -- his, or the donor's?
 
The same issue arises in the case of a head transplant onto a male body.
 
A paper last year in the Journal of Medical Ethics urged a rethink of risk-benefit ratio of non life-saving organ transplants.
 
"The greatest risk transplant recipients face comes from the powerful but noxious agents, immunosuppressives, which must be used to keep transplanted organs from being rejected," wrote Arthur Caplan and Duncan Purves.
 
A long list of possible side effects -- including cancer -- can be justified for a heart or lung transplant, they argued, but possibly less so for a new face, hand or penis.
 
"The shift away from saving lives to seeking to make them better requires a shift in the ethical thinking that has long formed the foundation of organ transplantation," the duo argued.
Hearings on the "Armenia v. Azerbaijan" case continue at the Hague Court - LIVE

News line

The Agenda to Destabilize the South Caucasus - OPINION
15:25 16.04.2024
Zelenskyy says Ukraine ready to negotiate with Russia
15:13 16.04.2024
US Department of Defense Confirms Intercept of 87 UAVs in Iran's Attack on Israel
15:00 16.04.2024
Major infrastructure projects facing the government in the coming years disclosed
Major infrastructure projects facing the government in the coming years disclosed
14:50 16.04.2024
Azerbaijani President: ‘Efficient utilization of water resources is our primary task’
Azerbaijani President: ‘Efficient utilization of water resources is our primary task’
14:40 16.04.2024
President: After the Shirvan irrigation canal has been put into operation, Lake Hajigabul will also be filled
14:28 16.04.2024
President Ilham Aliyev: Caspian Sea water desalination project is underway
14:12 16.04.2024
Ilham Aliyev: 'Unmatched Scale of Work is being implemented in Karabakh and Eastern Zangazur'
14:03 16.04.2024
Azerbaijan weather forecast for April 17
Azerbaijan weather forecast for April 17
14:00 16.04.2024
Official Tehran reveals the weapons that will be used in the 2nd stage of response against Israel
13:50 16.04.2024
China Leads Global Nuclear Expansion with 26 Reactors Under Construction
China Leads Global Nuclear Expansion with 26 Reactors Under Construction
13:40 16.04.2024
Media: Israel has a secret plan against Iran
13:25 16.04.2024
Energy Concerns for World: Europe and North America's Undersea Communication Networks at Risk
Energy Concerns for World: Europe and North America's Undersea Communication Networks at Risk
13:05 16.04.2024
The real face of Nobel Prize nominee Vardanyan... - "Money Laundering" reports
12:50 16.04.2024
Azerbaijan extends period of providing supplements to salaries of health workers fighting COVID-19
Azerbaijan extends period of providing supplements to salaries of health workers fighting COVID-19
12:35 16.04.2024
Population Decline Continues in Japan: Largest Decrease Since 1950
12:25 16.04.2024
Hearings on the "Armenia v. Azerbaijan" case continue at the Hague Court - LIVE
12:20 16.04.2024
Borrell: EU knew in advance about Iran’s retaliatory strike on Israel
12:14 16.04.2024
Uranium Found in Soldier's Room at Holsworthy Barracks in Sydney
Uranium Found in Soldier's Room at Holsworthy Barracks in Sydney
12:00 16.04.2024
Female Demining Teams Trained at Tartar Regional Vocational Training Center of IEPF - PHOTOS
11:49 16.04.2024
Will US impose oil sanctions on Iran?
11:40 16.04.2024
EU Ambassador Vasilis Maragos Urges Recognition of Former Soviet Administrative Borders as International
11:28 16.04.2024
Leaders meeting: EU Actively Engaged in Peace Process Between Armenia and Azerbaijan
11:16 16.04.2024
Iran and Russia Sign Agreement for Rasht-Astara Railway Construction
11:01 16.04.2024
Azerbaijani President lays foundation stone for Shirvan irrigation canal
10:49 16.04.2024
Parliament of Georgia introduces special security regime
Parliament of Georgia introduces special security regime
10:35 16.04.2024
Landmines found in liberated Jabrayil
10:00 16.04.2024
Tunisia vows to strengthen ties with NATO
Tunisia vows to strengthen ties with NATO
09:47 16.04.2024
Expert Analysis: Israel's Defense Triumphs amidst Escalating Iran-Israel Tensions
09:30 16.04.2024
Volume of frozen Russian assets in Germany reaches around €3.9 bln
Volume of frozen Russian assets in Germany reaches around €3.9 bln
09:13 16.04.2024
Netanyahu a threat for Israel, opposition leader says
08:55 16.04.2024
The President of Georgia voiced solidarity with demonstrators in Tbilisi
The President of Georgia voiced solidarity with demonstrators in Tbilisi
23:55 15.04.2024
Saudi Arabia's involvement in preventing Iran's attacks on Israel has been denied
23:21 15.04.2024
Israel Army Chief tells soldiers Iran attack 'will be met with response'
22:26 15.04.2024
Italy closes its consulate in Tehran
Italy closes its consulate in Tehran
21:28 15.04.2024
Israel is reportedly delaying its ground operation in Rafah
21:09 15.04.2024
Delegation of the Political and Security Committee of the EU visited Aghdam - VIDEO/ PHOTOS
20:32 15.04.2024
Baku Steel Company represents Azerbaijan in Dusseldorf
Baku Steel Company represents Azerbaijan in Dusseldorf
20:00 15.04.2024
EU FMs to mull steps on de-escalation after Iran’s attacks on Israel
EU FMs to mull steps on de-escalation after Iran’s attacks on Israel
19:30 15.04.2024
Azerbaijan tightens punishments for domestic violence: administrative arrest will be applied
19:00 15.04.2024
Hamısı