Medical News Today reported that an Italian surgeon
is to announce updated plans to conduct the world's first human head
transplant within the next 2 years. Now, a 30-year-old Russian man is
set to become the first person to undergo the procedure.
Dr. Sergio Canavero, of the Turin Advanced Neuromodulation Group (TANG) in Italy, first spoke of his plans to carry out the first human head transplantation in July 2013 - a project named HEAVEN-GEMINI.
At the American Academy of Neurological and Orthopedic Surgeons' 39th
Annual Conference in Annapolis, MD, in June, Dr. Canavero will present updated plans for the project, addressing some of the previously identified challenges that come with it.
Though researchers have seriously questioned the feasibility of Dr.
Canavero's plans, it seems the first human head transplantation is a
step closer to becoming a reality; Valery Spiridonov, a 30-year-old
computer scientist from Vladimir, Russia, is the first person to
volunteer for the procedure.
Spiridonov has Werdnig-Hoffman disease - a rare genetic muscle wasting condition, also referred to as type 1 spinal muscular atrophy
(SMA). The condition is caused by the loss of motor neurons in the
spinal cord and the brain region connected to the spinal cord.
Individuals with the disease are unable to walk and are often unable to
sit unaided.
Spiridonov was diagnosed with Werdnig-Hoffman disease at the age of 1 and told MailOnline that he volunteered for HEAVEN-GEMINI because he wants the chance of a new body before he dies.
'"I can hardly control my body now," he said. "I need help every day,
every minute. I am now 30 years old, although people rarely live to more
than 20 with this disease."
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