War is usually not good for the human body. We get better at surviving, and once in a while that results in hope for us all.
A great story from NPR. listen here
“That truly is a special gift,” the retired Marine told reporters at a news conference at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston.
Peck, 31, underwent a 14-hour surgery in August, performed by a team of 60 doctors, nurses and other medical personnel led by Dr. Simon Talbot, the hospital’s director of upper extremity transplantation.
Talbot said it will be nine to 12 months before the nerves in Peck’s new arms are fully functional again. Still, Peck said he can lift his arms and is relearning to brush his teeth, dress and feed himself. His goal is to achieve the dream he’s had since he was a boy: to become a world-class chef.
Peck’s remarkable story was detailed in The Washington Post. In May 2010, he lost his limbs to an improvised explosive device during a search mission in a small village in Afghanistan’s Helmand province.
It was his second close brush with death. Peck suffered a traumatic brain injury in August 2007 while serving in Iraq. After his rehabilitation from that injury, he re-enlisted in the Marines in 2009.
The Boston Globe reports that Peck’s is the fourth double arm transplant performed at Brigham and Women’s Hospital. The hospital paid for the surgery, and the doctors volunteered their services.
The donor and his family have not been identified in accordance with their wishes, said a hospital spokesperson.
For his part, Peck made his gratitude plain.
“My deepest condolences to my donor’s family,” said Peck as his voice cracked.
“I’m not even going try to know what you’re going through at this time. But I will tell you this: Your loved one’s death will not be for nothing. Every day that I look down at our new arms, I will drive on through the pain and I will never give up.”