Self-Face Recognition After Face Transplantation



Status:Enrolling by invitation
Healthy:No
Age Range:Any
Updated:12/2/2018
Start Date:February 1, 2017
End Date:March 2020

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Pilot Study: Self-Face Recognition After Face Transplantation

The purpose of the proposed study is to use functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to
investigate how a change in facial appearance is initially represented in brain circuits and
then alters over time, as the new face becomes recognized as "me".

Investigators will try to identify areas of the brain responsible for processing and storing
information about self-facial recognition; Examine how these areas of the brain respond to
images of "self" and "non-self" and; Investigate how the brain responds, over time, to
changes in facial recognition, particularly at time points: i) prior to facial injury, ii)
post-injury but prior to facial transplantation, and iii) after receiving facial
transplantation.

Before surgery, investigators will compare activity in the brain when participants are
looking at their pre-injury and their injured face with activity when they are looking at the
persons face with whom they are familiar with. This will identify whether there are
differences between how the brain responds when patients view their current facial appearance
and when viewing their face before facial disfigurement. Investigators will then scan the
patients post-operatively when the transplant team deems the patient ready; this will depend
on reduction of post-operative swelling, improved communication with the treatment team, and
patient psychological status. Activity in the brain will be compared when participants are
looking at pictures of the familiar other person, with pictures of their pre-injury,
pre-transplant disfigured face and pictures of their post-transplant facial appearance.
Participants will be scanned again, at least two months later, with the same set of stimuli.
Activity in the brain will be compared when participants look at their pre-transplant
disfigured face and their new face, compared with activity when they look at the familiar
other. This will allow investigators to see the differences in how the brain responds to the
new facial appearance over time.

Inclusion Criteria:

- Patients who have suffered from severe facial disfigurement which warrant facial
transplantation and have been evaluated and approved for transplantation, will be
included.

Exclusion Criteria:

- Must be be able to enter and be scanned using MRI.

- Able to give full informed consent, before each scan and throughout their time in
which they are participating in the study

- Able to perform the task to a high standard and also to have no underlying conditions
that may alter how they process pictures of face

- Participants must have none of the following, which cannot safely be removed without
risk or discomfort while they enter the MRI unit:

- a pacemaker

- metal implants

- metal that cannot be removed on their body (e.g. shrapnel, piercings)

- metal clips

- an artificial heart valve

- a cochlear implant

- drug patches

- a contraceptive coil

- dental plates/braces with metal in

- hearing aids

- Participants will also be excluded on the grounds of safety and comfort inside the MRI
scanner if they have one of the following underlying conditions

- epilepsy

- diabetes

- heart disease

- thermoregulatory problems (problems regulating body temperature)

- a possibility of being pregnant

- currently breastfeeding

- Participants will also be excluded on the grounds of MRI data quality for the
following reasons:

- history of mental illness

- claustrophobia (discomfort in confined spaces)

- Neurological conditions
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