LACKLAND
AIR FORCE
BASE, Texas,
March 2010 –
The recipient
of the first
hand
transplant
performed in a
Defense
Department
facility said
today she
hopes her
surgery
provides hope
for
servicemembers
wounded in
combat.
Video
Retired Air
Force Master
Sgt. Janet
McWilliams is
the 10th
person, and
the first
woman, in the
United States
to receive a
hand
transplant. A
team of
military and
civilian
doctors
performed the
surgery Feb.
17 at Wilford
Hall Medical
Center here.
|

A
team
of
military
and
civilian
doctors
performs
the
first
U.S.
female
hand
transplant
Feb.
17,
2010,
at
Wilford
Hall
Medical
Center,
Lackland
Air
Force
Base,
Texas.
Retired
Master
Sgt.
Janet
McWilliams
is
the
10th
person
to
undergo
this
procedure
and
the
first
to
have
it
done
in
a
Defense
Department
facility.
Courtesy
photo
(Click
photo
for
screen-resolution
image);high-resolution
image
available.
|
|
Two weeks
after the
surgery,
McWilliams has
experienced
movement in
her thumb and
fingers, Air
Force Maj.
(Dr.) Dmitry
Tuder, chief
of hand and
upper
extremity
service at
Wilford Hall
and part of
the
transplantation
team, said at
a news
conference
today.
However, he
added, it will
take at least
six months for
her to regain
any feeling in
her new hand.
The
transplant,
Williams said,
is a
significant
occasion not
only for her,
but also for
wounded
warriors.
"I am
hoping that I
can open the
door for other
wounded
warriors who
are coming
back from
Iraq,
Afghanistan
and other
areas of the
world who've
lost hands
[or]
arms,"
she said.
Almost nine
years ago, the
former first
sergeant of
the 342nd
Training
Squadron here
lost her left
hand and
suffered
severe
injuries to
her right hand
when a package
bomb exploded
in her office.
After years of
surgical
reconstruction
and failed
attempts to
find a
suitable
prosthesis for
her left arm,
doctors asked
McWilliams if
she was
willing to be
put on a
waiting list
for a hand
transplant.
Having
undergone more
than 25
surgeries,
McWilliams
said, she
immediately
consented. On
Feb. 16, a
hand donor was
identified.
"I
received a
gift, a
hand,"
she said.
"In the
back of my
mind, I've
always wanted
to have a
hand. This
wonderful
family gave me
that gift. I'm
so honored to
have this
hand."
A hand
transplant
involves more
variables than
an organ
transplant,
said Dr. Joe
Nespral,
director of
clinical
services at
the Texas
Organ Sharing
Alliance.
Selecting a
donor for a
hand
transplant
recipient
involves
additional
emphasis on
matching
skin-tone
color, gender
and the size
of the hand,
he explained.
When she's in
the hospital,
McWilliams
dons a
hospital gown
with her first
sergeant rank
insignia and
the patches of
her former
units. She
said she hopes
the news of
this procedure
gives wounded
warriors
another choice
and helps them
decide if this
type of
procedure is
for them.
To date, no
active-duty
servicemembers
have undergone
this
procedure,
said Army Col.
(Dr.) James
Ficke,
chairman of
the Wilford
Hall and
Brooke Army
Medical Center
integrated
departments of
orthopedics
and
rehabilitation.
About 50
wounded
warriors have
an injury that
may be
eligible for
this type of
procedure, he
said. A former
Marine has
received a
hand
transplant,
but his
procedure was
done at a
civilian
facility.
McWilliams
faces months
of
occupational
therapy, and
in a years'
time, Tuder
said, he hopes
she will have
enough
function to
perform daily
activities.
"The
journey is
going to be
rough; it's
not going to
be easy,"
McWilliams
said.
"There's
nothing you
can't do in
life. 'No,' is
not part of my
vocabulary.
This beautiful
hand will
certainly
become a part
of my body.
Now, after all
these years, I
can finally
wear that
engagement
ring again and
my wedding
band. It is
just
absolutely
priceless."
(Air Force
Staff Sgt.
Vanessa Young
serves at
Defense Media
Activity San
Antonio.)