Thursday, February 20, 2025 - An acid attack victim’s eye has been saved by a donated placenta.
Battery acid was squirted in the face of Paul Laskey, 43, after his 16
year old son was mugged at knifepoint.
His left eye ‘melted’ away after the attack and his vision was saved by
a ‘life-changing’ medical procedure using a donated placenta.
When the plumber and heating engineer went to apprehend his son’s mugger
in Newcastle on February 5 2023, he was squirted in the face with a corrosive
acid.
‘I couldn’t see and couldn’t breathe. It took my breathe away with how
strong it was. I felt burning on my face.” He told Metro UK.
‘I wasn’t in a lot of pain because it had burnt through all the nerves.’
Paul added: ‘It was horrendous. I was off work for the first six months.
It was all that was on my mind. It was just awful.
‘I immediately worried that I would lose it completely, which would have
upended my life.
‘I was scared that I wouldn’t be able to work, drive, play football with or go
to the cinema with my kids, like I love to do.’
Paul required intensive care and over the course of a year he received two cornea transplants from donated eyes, as well as ‘essential’ treatment from a donated placenta.
From the placenta, doctors used an amnion graft, which comes from the
inner lining of the organ
The ‘sticky’ and almost transparent substance seals itself against the
eye, which helped to heal surface damage and cover nerve endings.
The 43-year-old went through went through this procedure three times,
including the first a week after the attack, stopping his sight from
deteriorating and stabilising the eye.
Due to the success of these amnion grafts, doctors are now planning
further stem cell treatment to give Paul more sight back in his left eye.
Professor Francisco Figueiredo, Consultant Ophthalmologist at
Newcastle Eye Centre, Royal Victoria Infirmary, who treated Paul for his
injuries, said:
‘It is safe to say that these grafts have helped to save the vision Paul still has – and allowed us to move towards further treatment to restore his lost sight.’
‘It is incredible to think that this is possible due to the generosity
of a mother, donating the organ that she has grown to help grow her child. It
really is remarkable.’
Paul, who only found out recently his sight-saving ops were made
possible by a placenta, added: ‘
I’m so grateful that the amnion graft has helped to keep the sight
that I do have and prepare my eye so that hopefully I can get my full range of
vision back.
‘I’m so thankful to the mother who chose to donate her placenta to help people
like me who are at risk of losing their sight completely.
‘It’s incredible to know that a new life can help so many people in such a
profound way, using something that’s usually thrown away.’
The placenta is an organ that forms in the womb and provides oxygen and
nutrients to the fetus.
0 Comments