HealthPop
By

David W Freeman /

CBS News/ April 19, 2011, 3:23 PM

Hand transplant: What next for Emily Fennell? (PICTURES)

emily fennell, hand transplant

Hand transplant recipient Emily Fennell, 26, shows both hands during an occupational therapy session at Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center. Her right hand is the transplant.

/ UCLA Health System

(CBS/AP) Seven weeks after receiving the first hand transplant in the western U.S., Emily Fennell says she is looking forward to being able to do little things most people take for granted - like putting her hair in a ponytail or cutting up steak with a knife and fork.

PICTURES: Emily Fennell shows off hand transplant

The 26-year-old single mom was given a "donor hand" in a marathon 14-hour procedure at Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center on March 4, after losing her own right hand almost five years ago in a rollover car accident. Today she reunited with her doctors for a press conference to show off her new hand - the "gift" from an unnamed deceased donor - and talk about her experience.

"It has been surreal to see that I have a hand again, and be able to wiggle my fingers," she said, according to a statement released by UCLA. "My 6-year-old daughter has never seen me with a hand. She looked at it, touched it and said it was 'cool.' "

The transplant surgery was the 13th of only 14 such operations performed in the U.S. It involved a team of 17 surgeons, anesthesiologists, operating room nurses and technicians.

The first hand transplantation was carried out in Ecuador in 1964, before the development of modern immunosuppressive therapy. Since then, more than 40 hand transplants have been performed around the world, including several double hand transplants. The recipient of the first U.S. hand transplant in 1999 has lived with a donor hand for a little over a decade.

Fennell, who is from Yuba City, California, was discharged from the hospital on April 6 but is planning to spend a couple of months living near the hospital so doctors can monitor her - and so she can get occupational therapy.

How's it going? Very well, says Dr. Kodi Azari, surgical director of UCLA's hand transplantation program.

"She is making the emotional transition from calling it 'the' hand to 'my' hand," Azari said in the statement. "From a surgical standpoint, we achieved a good connection of the nerves and blood vessels, and the balance between the palm and back-of-the-hand tendons appears to be pristine."

Fennell will need to take antirejection drugs for the rest of her life - or her body's immune system could reject the new hand. And the hope is that occupational therapy will enable her brain to work seamlessly with the new hand and to give her as much dexterity as possible.

"It's been five years since she used those muscles, and they have atrophied, weakened and shortened," Renee Portenier, an occupational therapist at UCLA, said in the statement. "Now we have to wake up those muscles again to build strength and neural connections."

Fennell was right-handed before the June 2006 accident. She tried a couple of different prosthetic hands but stopped using them after finding them unsatisfactory.

Fennell doesn't have any sensation yet in the transplanted hand, the Los Angeles Times reported. She probably won't for several months. But she's optimistic that things will continue to improve.

"The minute you tell me I can't do something," she told the paper, "I do it."

© 2011 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
12 Comments Add a Comment
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Forty-Four says:
I was under the impression that she had just lost her hand in an accident, but AMAZING none the less.
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samXXkiley says:
coucou,
je comprend ta joie Emily, je suis contente pour toi,
merci aux g?n?reux donateurs, donner est le plus beaux des gestes

.....................
I understand your joy Emily, I'm happy for you,
thank you to generous donors, giving is the most beautiful gestures
"au revoir"
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The Platzner Post says:
The miracle of modern medicine!!!
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EmtFF10 says:
I would like to say best of luck with her new hand. Quite a bit of work ahead.
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EmtFF10 says:
@ mari1963: Do you know personally if she is a welfare mom? or is this just a snide & racist comment.
I had a traumatic injury to my left hand 32 yrs ago, went thru 17 1/2 hrs of plastics & micro surgery, spent 2 yrs in PT & OT. Then back thru 5 more surgeries over the years to correct the scar tissue problems. I still have the use of my left hand (approx 65%). the Drs, PT, OT Staff Surg Techs, nurses & other staff were very awesome. I was originally told that I had a 5% of keeping my left hand after the first 6 months due to the severe amount of damage that was, however I beat those odds. Oh yes Mari1963 WELFARE didnt 1 dime of the bills that were incurred of my surgeries & therapy.
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57vw says:
So who gets to pay for the 17 surgeons, anesthesiologists, operating room nurses and technicians?
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mari1963 replies:
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Welfare. Because she's probably a single mom on welfare. Why is she a single mom? Where is her husband?
CJ-Keith replies:
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Who cares? She is young and her quality of life will improve tremendously. Money comes and goes, life and living a good quality of life and doing things people do take for granted is what makes more sense. Come on, get real.
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gruven13777 says:
Amazing. Kudos to the donor.
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mecury69 replies:
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Yup, gotta hand it to her.
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Forty-Four says:
fancy that
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