NEW YORK -- A Mississippi firefighter who was disfigured while trying to save people from a house fire 14 years ago will get a second chance to get his life back and feel normal again.
He's received the face of a Brooklyn cyclist in a remarkable transplant carried out in Manhattan, at the NYU Langone Medical Center.
The bike rider died in an accident in July, and it took over 12 hours to make his face, the new face for 41-year old Patrick Hardison.
His doctors warned him that the procedure was so risky that he had only a 50-50 chance of surviving it.
But it was a risk he was willing to take.
"I prayed daily that there would be a miracle to help me get through this, and you know, it's all in God's timing," Hardison said.
The surgery has paved the way for him to regain normal vision, and in an interview last week he said that will let him accomplish a major goal: "I'll start driving again."
More than two dozen face transplants have been performed worldwide since the first one in France in 2005. Dr. Eduardo Rodriguez, who led the surgical team that did Hardison's transplant and recently wrote a review of the field, said Hardison's is by far the most extensive performed successfully in terms of the amount of tissue transferred.
The transplant extends from the top of the head, over Hardison's skull and down to the collarbones in front; in back, it reaches far enough down that only a tiny patch of Hardison's original hair remains - its color matched by the dark blond hair growing on his new scalp. The transplant includes both ears.
The surgery began Aug. 14 and lasted 26 hours. It left no scars on Hardison's new face because the seam of the transplanted tissue runs down the back of his skull.
The donor was 26-year-old New York artist and competitive bicyclist David P. Rodebaugh. He had died of injuries from a biking accident on a Brooklyn street.
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(The Associated Press contributed to this report.)