Tuesday, March 31, 2020

Woman's transplanted 'man hands' became lighter and more feminine over time
She had lost both arms below the elbow, in a bus accident

In 2017, Shreya Siddanagowder underwent Asia's first intergender hand transplant.
(Image: © MOHAN Foundation/FaceBook)


By Mindy Weisberger - Senior Writer


A young woman in India who lost both of her hands in a bus accident received limbs from a darker-skinned male donor. Years later, the skin of her transplanted hands has lightened.

After her accident in 2016, 18-year-old Shreya Siddanagowder's arms were amputated below the elbow. In 2017, she underwent a 13-hour transplant operation performed by a team of 20 surgeons and 16 anesthesiologists, The Indian Express reported on March 7.

Her transplanted hands came from a 21-year-old man who died after a bicycle crash. Over the next year and a half, physical therapy improved Siddanagowder's motor control of her arms and hands, which gradually became leaner than they were at the time of the transplant. But there was another unexpected change: The skin on her new limbs, which had been darker because the donor had a darker complexion, became lighter in color, so that it more closely matched Siddanagowder's skin tone, according to The Indian Express.

Related:


HANDS OF ORLAC HAMMER REMAKE 1960 CHRISTOPHER LEE


Stars: Paul Lukather, Joan Harvey, James Noah Writer/Director: Newt Arnold After a concert pianist loses his hands in a car crash, a surgeon grafts on a pair of a murderer that seem to have a mind of their own! Loosely based on the novel The Hands of Orlac.

The hands of Orlac (1924) is a silent horror directed by the expressionist film maker Robert Wiene. It tell the story of a famous pianist who loses his had in a tragic accident, after a full hand transplant, he finds his new hands have taken on the murderous tendencies of their former owner. The film tell us a lot about the nature of fear, most specifically about the fear of losing your identity, and the fear of losing your free will. For More videos please subscribe or follow me on twitter at www.twitter.com/100yearscinema Thanks for watching One Hundred Years of Cinema, I will be writing a video essay about at least one film each year from 1915 onward to track the evolution of film over the last century. Please subscribe and share! Thank you!

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