Surgeons at the University of Maryland School of Medicine performed the transplant on Friday. Photo: University of Maryland School of Medicine Surgeons at the University of Maryland Medical Center transplanted a heart from a genetically modified pig into a human patient with terminal heart disease on Friday.
Though Bennett’s prognosis remains uncertain, he was still doing well three days after the operation, doctors at the hospital said Monday. They will continue to monitor him for the foreseeable future; a combination of drugs were also administered to Bennett to prevent his immune system from rejecting the organ.
Dr. Bartley Griffith, left and patient David Bennett. Photo: Handout/University of Maryland School of Medicine Every day, roughly a dozen Americans on organ transplant lists die, as demand for replacement organs always outstrips the supply from other people, the New York Times noted Monday. More than 41,000 Americans received transplanted organs last year, including more than 3,800 who received hearts from human donors.
“If this works, there will be an endless supply of these organs for patients who are suffering,” commented Dr. Muhammad Mohiuddin, the director of cardiac xenotransplantation program at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, regarding Mr. Bennett’s operation. Dr. Mohiuddin and Dr. Griffith have been studying the technique they used for Bennett’s transplant for five years.
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