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Christiaan Barnard and transplant surgery

On 3 December 1967, Groote Schuur Hospital in South Africa was put in the world鈥檚 spotlight when Christiaan Barnard performed the world鈥檚 first heart transplant. His patient, Louis Washkansky, only lived for 18 days before dying of pneumonia. However, his new heart beat strongly to the end.

Other heart transplants followed. However, one of the major problems of these early operations was the risk of rejection of the transplant by the body鈥檚 immune system. However, this was largely overcome by the development of drugs such as cyclosporine, which help the body to accept the replacement organ.

Barnard amazed the world by carrying out the first heart transplant. However, this was by no means the only example of transplant surgery in the past 100 years or so.

Year/DecadeKey event
1905The first cornea transplant
1940sDuring World War Two, plastic surgery was first used to rebuild the faces of badly burned airmen
1952The first kidney transplant
1961The first pacemakers were placed in the heart (to maintain a regular heartbeat)
1962Surgeons at Massachusetts General Hospital reattached the arm of a 12-year-old boy
1963The first liver transplant
1967The first heart transplant
1972Hip replacements were developed
1980sBone marrow transplants were developed
1982The first heart and lung transplant
Year/Decade1905
Key eventThe first cornea transplant
Year/Decade1940s
Key eventDuring World War Two, plastic surgery was first used to rebuild the faces of badly burned airmen
Year/Decade1952
Key eventThe first kidney transplant
Year/Decade1961
Key eventThe first pacemakers were placed in the heart (to maintain a regular heartbeat)
Year/Decade1962
Key eventSurgeons at Massachusetts General Hospital reattached the arm of a 12-year-old boy
Year/Decade1963
Key eventThe first liver transplant
Year/Decade1967
Key eventThe first heart transplant
Year/Decade1972
Key eventHip replacements were developed
Year/Decade1980s
Key eventBone marrow transplants were developed
Year/Decade1982
Key eventThe first heart and lung transplant

Transplants today

In 2005, doctors in France carried out a partial face transplant (including nose and mouth). Some surgeons are now considering the possibility of transplanting a whole head. Today, transplants of all sorts are commonplace, with up to 200 heart transplants alone carried out in the UK each year.

In fact, one of the main issues today is the lack of donors. In 2015, Wales became the first nation in the UK to make organ donation compulsory, with England and Scotland introducing similar laws in 2020. Adults are now regarded as having consented to organ donation unless they have opted out.

World Transplant Games Federation

The history of the World Transplant Games Federation can be seen on the organisation鈥檚 website. This extract is evidence of the success of transplant surgery across the world.

The first competitive sporting event for transplant recipients took place in Portsmouth, England in 1978 with around 99 competitors from the UK, France, Germany, Greece and the USA. Today we the hold the Summer World Transplant Games every two years and the Winter Games in the intervening years.鈥疘n 1987 the World Transplant Games Federation was officially formed and now has nearly 70 member countries worldwide.
World Transplant Games Federation