Woman gets new tongue made from arm after cancer diagnosis
Scar on Joanna Smith's arm where tissue and a vein were taken for her new tongue |
A 58-year-old woman who was reportedly faced with either surgically removing part of her tongue or succumbing to cancer within months has had a new one fashioned out of a vein and pieces of her arm. Joanna Smith said her trouble started in October when she noticed an ulcer in her mouth, which doctors determined to be cancerous, SWNS reported.
“He said if I didn’t have the operation I wouldn’t see next Christmas,” Smith, a grandmother from Bedfordshire, England, told SWNS. “He said I would be lucky if I got six to eight more months. That was a bit of a shock.”
She told the news outlet that surgeons removed nearly all of her tongue, the glands in her neck and multiple teeth in a 10-hour operation, which also included cutting skin and muscle from her leg initially intended to create a new tongue. But the pieces obtained from her leg were rejected and her family gave permission to the surgeon to try another approach using her arm.
Smith’s new tongue |
In total, Smith said it took three surgeries and a vein and skin from her left arm to create the tongue she has now. While she said it’s obvious where the doctors were forced to take the muscle, skin and vein from in order to create her new tongue, she called her doctors “fantastic.”
“They always said they would be able to replace my tongue with a new one, but it was nerve-racking,” she told SWNS. “There were 29 people involved in the operation. When I woke up I was a bit disoriented but I could talk straight away. It felt like I had something strange in my mouth.”
She said she avoids foods that are too hot to avoid burning her new tongue and is hopeful that doctors can replace her teeth. She is slowly transitioning to eating solid foods, including salmon and potatoes, SWNS reported.
James Linsell-Clark / SWNS |
“I have to think before I eat now and I have to wash my mouth out,” she told SWNS. “I can’t just do or eat what I used to. I have to think about talking. I have to make sure I don’t bite my tongue because I can’t feel bits of it.”
Smith told the news outlet that she is now cancer free.
SOURCE NYPOST
SOURCE NYPOST
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