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Authors: Mary Roach

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There are so many things DesLauriers could have said to the admiral. She could have said, “Strap-ons, sir? Thigh riders?” She could have quoted from Ellis and Dennison’s book. “‘Incorporation of a residual limb in creative ways, such as stimulating a female partner’s clitoris,’ sir?” “‘Exploration of other areas that could provide more pleasure (e.g., nipples, neck, ears, prostate, rectum),’ sir?” She went with something more basic: “I said, ‘Sir, if I can be very candid with you. Does he have a tongue, and can he be taught?’”

“The other thing to keep in mind,” Jezior says, “is that in the early stages after a major injury, there’s a lot going on that makes sexual intimacy not necessarily the priority . . .”

Dean, nodding: “Like,
Can I brush my own teeth now?

“And they’re heavily medicated to get them through this period.” Narcotics, nerve stabilizers, antidepressants. “So if they’re not getting a good erection, you say, ‘Let’s get you through this, get you off the pain meds, and then see how you’re doing.’”

Or, if you’re Christine DesLauriers, you say, “Can you handle a bit of pain? Cut back on the meds for four hours, have sex, go back on the meds.” Catheter in the way? Fold it back and put on a condom. “Absolutely you can have sex with an indwelling catheter!”

Aside from Christine DesLauriers, are there other promising developments? What’s on the urotrauma horizon? What about penis transplants? I’m only half-serious, but Jezior starts talking about experimental work going on at Johns Hopkins.

“Wait, they’re going to transplant a penis?” Some extraneous decibels on that. A couple look up from their paninis.

Jezior says, “Yeah”—the kind of
yeah
you give someone who’s asked if you want your receipt, or fries with that, like it’s nothing. He adds that one of the patients in the photographs we were looking at is a candidate. Though it won’t happen for at least six months. “They’re doing some cadaver work right now.”

“Really.”

It Could Get Weird

A salute to genital transplants

 

T
HE ELDERLY DEAD—THE MEN,
anyway—always seem to need a shave. Maybe it’s because their demise so often unfolds over a span of days. While dying leaves plenty of unscheduled time one could use for shaving, for trimming one’s toenails or arranging one’s hair, there is little energy for sprucing up and really no call. The two dead men lying on gurneys in the cadaver lab of the Maryland State Anatomy Board this morning share the look—stubble and bed hair—but aside from that, they appear nothing alike. One is fleshy and barrel-chested. His legs are splayed at the hip with knees bent, one higher than the other. The carefree legs of a man dancing a jig. The other cadaver is rigid and lean. His legs lie pressed together like chopsticks. You could almost slide him under a teller window. One body has a tattoo, the other has none.

One is circumcised, and one is not. Given that the surgery being worked out this morning is a penis transplant—a lead-up to the first such operation in the United States—this is the difference that stands out. Though of course it doesn’t matter. The recipient will never wake to see his new endowment. Thus the cadavers weren’t chosen for any particular genital attribute. “They are whoever happened to be on hand,” says Rick Redett, the surgeon heading up the session, “and male.”

Redett and the plastic and reconstructive surgeons assisting him—Damon Cooney and Sami Tuffaha—are from down the road, at Johns Hopkins University. The Hopkins School of Medicine, with funding from the Defense Department, has been the setting for a lot of innovation in the field of transplantation over the past decade. The members of the surgical team that performed the first double-hand and the first above-elbow transplant in the United States are there now. Hopkins transplanters helped refine a technique called marrow infusion, which greatly reduces the likelihood that a patient’s body will reject its new parts. This is especially helpful with transplants of composite tissue. A face or hand—unlike a liver or kidney—is a variety pack of skin, muscle, mucous membrane. If you’re talking about a penis, add erectile tissue to the list. The body may accept one or two kinds of tissue and reject another. Skin is especially problematic because it’s a protective barrier; immunologically, it’s on high alert. To fool the body’s sentries, patients receive an infusion of the donor’s bone marrow—marrow being a generator of immune cells. The donor’s marrow doesn’t replace the patient’s own, but it reprograms the immune agenda to an extent. The body may glower suspiciously at its new parts but stops short of wholesale eviction. A lower risk of rejection means fewer immune-suppressant drugs are needed, and at lower doses. That, in turn, means fewer side effects and healthier patients.

New techniques like marrow infusion have tipped the ethical balance for transplants that are non-life-saving. The benefits of a face or hand—and maybe a penis—transplant have begun to outweigh the drawbacks. (Legs are a less appealing type of transplant, partly because the nerves have so far to regrow. For now, prosthetics present a better option.)

Redett heads the Johns Hopkins transplant team’s reconstructive and plastic surgery arm, and, like me writing this sentence, will stick a body part most anywhere. Earlier he described separating a set of conjoined twins. The sentence ran like this: “. . . so we transplanted the dying sister’s leg and buttocks and a little bit of her pelvis and then we took her aorta and plugged it into . . .” Redett’s own features are solidly After-photo: the face well balanced, the nose small to average-sized, the eyes pleasingly spaced. His voice is the stand-out element. He sounds just like the actor James Spader.

Redett pulls on a surgical cap cut like a knight’s chain mail: all the way down over the ears and low across the forehead—the better to ward off cadaver lab smell. (He has a lunch meeting.) Cooney’s cap is a bright green luck-of-the-Irish clover-print number that belonged to his dad. Flashes of gray hair can be seen below it, at his temples, though you would not use the word
distinguished
to describe him.
Adorable
you might use. He is forty but looks thirty. He also, in tribute, wears the old man’s magnifying loupes, which are too big for his face and keep sliding down his nose. Today he has a cold, well timed given the odors of the morning.

Veterans from Walter Reed often come to Johns Hopkins for phalloplasty—a penis reconstruction made from a cannoli roll of their own forearm skin implanted with saline-inflatable rods. The resulting “neopenis” is impressively natural looking. It is a testament to Redett’s skill that some of the pictures on his phone could be mistaken for Anthony Wiener–style selfies.

“This is a soldier who was hit with an RPG in Afghanistan. Lost his testes and scrotum and penis. There’s the flap being raised on his arm.” Redett swipes through photos like a proud parent. “We made a scrotum using a tissue expander in his perineum. Here it is with the artificial testes. He has total sensation now.” After nine months to a year, a patient’s penile nerves regrow in the tissue formerly known as arm, supplying normal penile sensations and triggering orgasm very much as they used to.

So why would a man opt for a transplant? Especially since transplants still—even with the marrow infusion—require some degree of immunosuppression. And not only does immunosuppression diminish the body’s defenses, opening the door to infections and cancers, but the drugs it requires have hefty side effects. Why not stick with phalloplasty?

“Here’s the problem.” Redett steps over to a whiteboard on the wall and draws a penis. For a moment, it looks like fifth graders had the run of the place. The problem is extrusion: implants poking through the tip of the penis, typically during intercourse. Penile implants were designed for men with erectile dysfunction (severe cases that Cialis won’t help). In these men, the inflatable rods are inserted into tough fibrous sheaths that line the erectile chambers (two of which run the length of the shaft like the barrels of a gun). Phalloplasty patients have no sheaths, just skin—which is easier to poke through. Think of holding a restaurant drinking straw in your fist and pulling down the wrapper until the straw pushes out the top. It’s that kind of situation. The extrusion rate has been reported to be as high as 40 percent (though sheathing the implants with Dacron or cadaveric tissue sleeves has helped somewhat). Also, as mentioned in the previous chapter, urethras made from forearm skin sometimes prune up and deteriorate in a moist environment.

Besides, a man might like to have a natural, no-pumping-needed erection. (To get hard, a man with implants has to squeeze a bulb inside the scrotum that pumps saline.) A man might also, when he’s finished with that erection, wish to have a less bulky, more retractable organ. Uninflated penile implants are less rigid but no shorter. “Right?”

Cooney glances over his loupes. “In general, Mary? Men don’t complain about it being too big.”

A
S YOU
read this, Redett’s team may have undertaken their first transplant. When I last checked in, in February 2016, a wounded veteran had been selected and was awaiting a suitable donor. In addition to the matching criteria used with internal organs, a penis must also, Redett said in an email, be a good match visually: “Skin color and . . . age.” And size, I wrote back? This he shrewdly ignored.

Their first won’t be the world’s first. That took place in China in 2006, at the hospital of the Guangzhou Military Command. In the case study, the surgeons describe the recipient not as a soldier but as the victim of an unspecified “unfortunate traumatic accident.” Additional trauma ensued: The new penis “regretfully had to be cut off” after two weeks. The man’s body didn’t reject it, but his wife did. No details were supplied other than to say that there was a “severe psychological problem . . . beyond our and the patient’s imagination.” Swelling was mentioned, and some necrotic tissue.

Necrosis happens when tissue is deprived of oxygen—in this case, because someone’s transplant surgeon didn’t hook up the necessary arteries. The skin turns black and leathery and eventually falls off.


Necrotic
means dead,” explains Cooney. “Surgeons don’t like to say
dead
.”

Even without necrosis, a transplanted appendage has a taint of death. It’s not dead, but it is a bit
resurrected.
You can imagine how a patient might be uncomfortable with it. With internal organs like kidneys or lungs, the psychological consequences are generally mild: out of sight, out of mind. “But it is not so easy to use and see . . . a dead person’s hands, nor is it easy to look in a mirror and see a dead person’s face,” wrote Jean-Michel Dubernard, the surgeon who successfully transplanted the first hand—which was later removed, the patient believing it to be evil. (The hand was swollen and inflamed, though not from evil. The recipient had stopped taking his immunosuppresants.)

Cooney’s experience has been otherwise. “People really thought that with the hand and face transplants, conversion”—the psychological assimilation of another person’s body part—“was going to be an issue.” It has not been. “I realized that that is the whole person’s hubris: You and I have two hands, so having another hand would feel unnatural. But having a missing hand is
more
unnatural.” Cooney’s experience with all six of the hand transplant patients his team has worked on is that the instant they wake up, even though they can’t yet feel or even see their new hand, it feels like their own. This has been true even in cases where the hand was from a person of a different gender or with a slightly different skin color.

Receiving a stranger’s face has also proved less disturbing than people had imagined, because the alternative is no face at all. “Patients say, ‘I don’t care whose face I get,’” says Cooney. “Having a face is being human. Not having a face is being some movie monster.”

And penises? “I’ve been trying to think,” says Cooney, straightening a row of surgical instruments laid out on the big guy’s belly. “What’s different about the penis? It’s not part of one’s identity in the way a face or even hands are. But there’s something about it. It’s
more
personal, in a way, because no one sees it.”

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