Xenotransplantation
Transplantation from one species to a foreign one.
The rationale for xenotransplantation has included the short supply of human organs for transplantation.</P> The first surgeon to do an animal-to-human heart transplant was Dr.
James D.
Hardy.
After doing the first human lung transplant in 1963, Hardy did the first animal-to-human heart transplant in 1964 at the University of Mississippi.
The transplant involving a chimpanzee heart was done three years before the first human-heart transplant (by Christiaan Barnard).
Perhaps the most famous case of cross-species transplantation was that of a heart from a baboon to Baby Fae in 1984, performed by Dr.
Leonard Bailey at Loma Linda University, California.
Baby Fae lived for 20 days after the operation.</P> The first to show that nonhuman organs could be transplanted to humans and function for a significant period of time was Dr.
Keith Reemtsma (1925-2000).
At Tulane University in New Orleans Dr.
Reemtsma in 1963 and 1964 gave chimpanzee kidneys to 5 patients in the first chimpanzee-to-human transplants.
The recipients died (of infection) from 8 to 63 days after receiving a chimpanzee kidney.
Then, in 1964 Reemtsma transplanted a kidney from a chimpanzee to a 23-year-old teacher.
She lived with it for 9 months until succumbing to overwhelming infection.
The prefix 'xeno-' means foreign.
It comes from the Greek word 'xenos' meaning stranger, guest, or host.
(Xenophobia is fear of foreigners).
Xenotransplantation is synonymous with cross-species transplantation.