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A voice lost and found

01:00 Sat 23rd Dec 2000 |

By Lisa Cardy

A GROUNDBREAKING larynx transplant operation�to give back the power of speech to throat cancer victims could be standard procedure within four years.

But there are�huge�emotional implications as recipients' voices will have the pitch and quality of the donor when they try to speak.

A fully functioning replacement voice box would bring a much higher quality of life to thousands of sufferers worldwide.

The removal of the larynx has a devastating affect on the patient. It doesn't just take away the ability to speak, it also disrupts a wide range of essential functions, such as swallowing, smelling, tasting, laughing and crying.

Bristol head and neck surgeon Martin Birchall has been awarded a �1.2 million fellowship by the Wellcome charitable trust to prepare for the procedure.�He says initial surgery will take place on people who have a paralysed voice box, and�hopes the first transplants would be performed�by 2004.

As in the case of other transplants, laryngeal transplants require a donor organ from a body that matches the recipient's blood and tissue types.

But doctors will have to ensure that�there is no cross over in the lifestyle of the donor and recipient. A�patient speaking with the voice of a dead loved one would be�distressing for all.

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