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Connie Culp, Nation's First Face Transplant Patient, Emerges (PHOTOS, VIDEO)

Huffingtion Post/AP   First Posted: 06/05/09 06:12 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 02:20 PM ET

Connie Culp


AP:
CLEVELAND -- Five years ago, a shotgun blast left a ghastly hole where the middle of her face had been. Five months ago, she received a new face from a dead woman.

Connie Culp stepped forward Tuesday to show off the results of the nation's first face transplant, and her new look was a far cry from the puckered, noseless sight that made children run away in horror.

Culp's expressions are still a bit wooden, but she can talk, smile, smell and taste her food again. Her speech is at times a little tough to understand. Her face is bloated and squarish, and her skin droops in big folds that doctors plan to pare away as her circulation improves and her nerves grow, animating her new muscles.

Scroll down for graphic photos, video.

But Culp had nothing but praise for those who made her new face possible.

"I guess I'm the one you came to see today," the 46-year-old Ohio woman said at a news conference at the Cleveland Clinic, where the groundbreaking operation was performed. But "I think it's more important that you focus on the donor family that made it so I could have this person's face."

Up until Tuesday, Culp's identity and how she came to be disfigured were a secret.

Culp's husband, Thomas, shot her in 2004, then turned the gun on himself. He went to prison for seven years. His wife was left clinging to life. The blast shattered her nose, cheeks, the roof of her mouth and an eye. Hundreds of fragments of shotgun pellet and bone splinters were embedded in her face. She needed a tube into her windpipe to breathe. Only her upper eyelids, forehead, lower lip and chin were left.

A plastic surgeon at the Cleveland Clinic, Dr. Risal Djohan, got a look at her injuries two months later. "He told me he didn't think, he wasn't sure, if he could fix me, but he'd try," Culp recalled.

She endured 30 operations to try to fix her face. Doctors took parts of her ribs to make cheekbones and fashioned an upper jaw from one of her leg bones. She had countless skin grafts from her thighs. Still, she was left unable to eat solid food, breathe on her own, or smell.

Then, on Dec. 10, in a 22-hour operation, Dr. Maria Siemionow led a team of doctors who replaced 80 percent of Culp's face with bone, muscles, nerves, skin and blood vessels from another woman who had just died. It was the fourth face transplant in the world, though the others were not as extensive.

"Here I am, five years later. He did what he said _ I got me my nose," Culp said of Djohan, laughing.

In January, she was able to eat pizza, chicken and hamburgers for the first time in years. She loves to have cookies with a cup of coffee, Siemionow said.

No information has been released about the donor or how she died, but her family members were moved when they saw before-and-after pictures of Culp, Siemionow said.

Culp said she wants to help foster acceptance of those who have suffered burns and other disfiguring injuries.

"When somebody has a disfigurement and don't look as pretty as you do, don't judge them, because you never know what happened to them," she said. "Don't judge people who don't look the same as you do. Because you never know. One day it might be all taken away."

It's a role she has already practiced, said clinic psychiatrist Dr. Kathy Coffman.

Once while shopping, "she heard a little kid say, `You said there were no real monsters, mommy, and there's one right there,'" Coffman said. Culp stopped and said, "I'm not a monster. I'm a person who was shot," and pulled out her driver's license to show the child what she used to look like, the psychiatrist said.

Culp, who is from the small town of Unionport, near the Pennsylvania line, told her doctors she just wants to blend back into society. She has a son and a daughter who live near her, and two preschooler grandsons. Before she was shot, she and her husband ran a painting and contracting business, and she did everything from hanging drywall to a little plumbing, Coffman said.

Culp left the hospital Feb. 5 and has returned for periodic follow-up care. She has suffered only one mild rejection episode that was controlled with a single dose of steroid medicines, her doctors said. She must take immune-suppressing drugs for the rest of her life, but her dosage has been greatly reduced and she needs only a few pills a day.

The clinic expects to absorb the cost of the transplant because it was experimental, doctors said. Siemionow estimated it at $250,000 to $300,000. That is less than the $1 million that other surgeons estimate it costs them to treat other severely disfigured people through dozens of separate operations, she said.

Also at the Cleveland Clinic is Charla Nash of Stamford, Conn., who was attacked by a friend's chimpanzee in February. She lost her hands, nose, lips and eyelids, and will be blind, doctors said. Clinic officials said it is premature to discuss the possibility of a face transplant for her.

In April, doctors at Harvard-affiliated Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston performed the nation's second face transplant, on a man disfigured in a freak accident. It was the world's seventh such operation. The first, in 2005, was performed in France on Isabelle Dinoire, a woman who had been mauled by her dog.

___

On the Net:

Cleveland Clinic: http://www.clevelandclinic.org/face

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04:53 PM on 05/09/2009
As the author of a book about people with facial differences (or deformities), I appreciate the thoughtful commentary on face transplant and Connie Culp's courage and amazing journey. As an observer, the most rewarding part for me is that people are more accepting of face transplant than even a year ago. That said, we must keep our fingers crossed that Ms. Culp and others who undergo this incredible procedure continue to do well.

Still, there are many disfigured people who, for one reason or another, have exhausted their options for reconstruction. They may not be candidates for face transplant and have no hope for a "fix."

If you meet someone who is disfigured, the best thing you can do is to look at them and smile. Often, they aren't thinking about how they look (you don't typically think about how you look unless you see your reflection). Imagine being greeted with a smile instead of a stare (or worse); it could really make your day.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
elizlucinda
a mind is a terrible thing to waste
02:49 PM on 05/09/2009
God bless her for being courageous enough to show us how strong a person can be. She is a remarkable person!!!
02:26 PM on 05/09/2009
What sentence did her husband get?
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MJinCanada
Safe from zombies until my 2nd cup of coffee
02:20 AM on 05/09/2009
I am awestruck by her courage and wish her all the best.
11:30 PM on 05/08/2009
This is just one of the best stories out there. This just makes a person feel good inside. Her spirit wasn't destroyed by that gunshot... she perserveered when many of us would have given up.

I love how in the after pictures she has a little bit of makeup on and you can tell she has had her hair cut and tinted... sometimes being able to do those "girlie" things again can put a bounce into your step.
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ywcachieve
President Barack H. Obama supporter.
11:05 PM on 05/08/2009
I am just horrified that the man who did this only got 7 years. What miscarriage of justice that is.
11:31 PM on 05/08/2009
Living well is the best revenge... it appears she is doing just that.
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ywcachieve
President Barack H. Obama supporter.
10:51 PM on 05/08/2009
It's a shame what that man did to her. This heinous crime deserves life in prison without parole.

I wish her the best.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
shel3364
05:15 PM on 05/08/2009
This is about the coolest thing I've seen in a long time. I wish her and her family all the best.


The news report on this irked me to no limit, though, when they showed her "before" picture and said it was from before her "accident". It was no accident, it was an assault and the son of a byotch who did this to her should have gotten much worse than 7 years.
11:23 PM on 05/08/2009
The least the should have called it was an assault. It was attempted murder and nothing else.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Aboomer
09:42 AM on 05/08/2009
Wow, how fantastic! Her nose looks lovely. And to be able to eat and breathe again normally -- something we generally take for granted -- must feel great.
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07:04 AM on 05/08/2009
What kind of criminal justice system do we have when her husband only got 7 years???? That's part of the horror of it all!!!!!
05:52 PM on 05/08/2009
He should be made to pay all of her medical bills...
11:22 PM on 05/08/2009
So true. I thought the same thing. It is crazy when people who have done leass and inflicted far less pain and suffering are serving looooooong sentences.

Go figure.
04:51 AM on 05/08/2009
This is good news on so many levels...
First of all I hope that the donors family will have some comfort from the fact that the donation made someone elses life so much better. I guess that the donor was fairly young and it must have been awful for the family to lose him/her. But something good has not come from that terrible loss.

Secondly it´s a great medical development for all the people who suffered facial trauma - from burning, shooting or cancer. It´s a step towards normally living for thousands of patients. The doctors will develop the technique, the medication to prevent graft-rejection will get better too.....

And thirdly it´s a great lesson in humanity and what is important in life. Be humble and grateful for what you got!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TedMichaelMorgan
12:19 AM on 05/08/2009
I recalla the first time I saw someone without a nose. I thought about how much we are how we look and how fleeting that look really is. What a blessing to restore life to someone so cruelly hurt. But what an awful experience for someone to endure. I love her sense of humor and her kindness toward the rest of us. She is the one who blesses us. She puts me in her debt.
05:01 PM on 05/08/2009
WOW! That was so nice.
11:05 PM on 05/07/2009
Wow, this is pretty remarkable. It's amazing what modern science can do!
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shaaronie
Never love what can't love you back!
09:20 PM on 05/07/2009
I am stunned! How utterly remarkable! It makes me more sure than ever that becoming a donar is the right thing for all of us to do! Science is truly amazing!
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mwoman
08:27 PM on 05/07/2009
It's wonderful that Connie Culp now has use of the senses blasted away with a shotgun. And her warning to all of us, that it can happen to any of us, is chilling. And what the Cleveland Clinic did was phenomenal. One person commented they should circulate photos of Culp to junior high school students who are especially sensitive about appearances. Maybe she is right. But I found myself looking at the photograph of her new face, thinking there is no other face in the world like it, and people will probably still feel uneasy about the face that gave Connie Culp another chance to live a normal life.