This procedure masterfully repurposes biological tissue to restore vital function where traditional anatomy has failed, showcasing the power of clinical ingenuity. It is a profound example of how creative surgical engineering can rebuild life on entirely new foundations.
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The Lets Adopt Podcast #1 - SKY追加:
[music] >> Imagine waking up, trying to open your mouth to eat, and [music] um realizing the joint connecting your jaw to your skull has just turned into a solid, [music] unmoving block of bone.
>> Just completely locked.
>> Right. Exactly. Locked [music] in. No matter how hard you try, the architecture of your own face is basically trapped you.
>> Which is terrifying to even think about.
>> is. And that was the actual physiological reality for a 5-year-old mixed [music] breed dog named Sky. Yeah.
So today, for you listening, our [music] mission with this deep dive is to reconstruct one of the most complex veterinary rescue cases ever recorded.
[music] We are pulling from a really fascinating stack of sources for this.
>> We have internal medical logs from Hospital Veterinario Valencia Sur in Spain, right? [music] >> Yes. And transcripts from the rescue organization Let's Adopt International, plus uh some reflective essays detailing the surgical decisions [music] of the team involved.
>> Which are incredible to read.
>> They are. We are going to explore what actually happens when medical professionals refuse to accept the limits [music] of their own field and literally invent an entirely new way to function. To really understand the sheer scale of the medical impossibility here, we have to look at the initial damage.
>> Right. The timeline.
>> Yeah. So Sky's case begins in early 2017 in Romania.
He suffered a catastrophic blunt force trauma to the face, um likely from a shovel or an axe. Which is just brutal.
>> It is. The impact resulted in the loss of his right eye and the complete destruction of his zygomatic arch.
That's your major cheekbone structure.
Okay.
>> Plus massive maxillofacial trauma. I mean, a half of his face was effectively crushed. But the crazy thing is, he survived that initial blow. Yeah. He was actually adopted by a family in Cologne, Germany shortly after.
And the photos the family saw beforehand, well, they only showed his uninjured side. Uh of course. So when he arrived in Germany, the true nature of his condition became immediately, you know, terrifyingly clear. The missing tissue on his face was really only the visible part of the crisis.
Right. Because the invisible damage was the actual threat to his life at that point. During the months following the trauma, Sky's body was obviously trying to heal itself, but without any medical intervention, that biological process went completely off the rails.
>> Oh, so.
Well, when bone is shattered, the body sends in these cells called osteoblasts to build new bone and bridge the gaps.
[music] That's normal. Okay. Sure.
>> But with massive trauma, those cells can massively overreact. In Sky's case, they filled the entire temporomandibular joint.
>> Oh, if the TMJ? Yes, the TMJ. The hinge that actually lets the jaw open and close.
The body laid down so much uncontrolled calcium and bone matrix that it fused [music] the upper and lower jaw together.
>> Just fused them completely.
>> Completely into a homogeneous solid block of bone.
>> Wow. And [music] the medical term for that is ankylosis, right?
>> Yes, ankylosis.
>> And the consequence of that was that Sky physically could not open his mouth. I mean, not even a fraction of an inch.
>> Which is just a nightmare scenario for any animal.
>> His adoptive family could only feed him watered-down soft food via a syringe.
[music] They were forcing it through this tiny millimeter-wide gap in his teeth. You can see the immediate crisis [music] there. I mean, a dog that cannot chew, cannot pant to regulate body heat, or properly swallow, that dog is on a countdown. Right. And when the rescue organization, Let's Adopt International, stepped in, their founder, Victor Larkhill, wrote extensively about this exact moment.
Taking on Sky was a profound operational risk. Because standard veterinary protocols would look at that, look at a fused, unrecognizable skull architecture, and just suggest euthanasia. Because the original biological blueprint was just it was obliterated.
>> obliterated. I want to visualize this for a second for our listeners, because understanding the mechanics here is so crucial to understanding the surgery that comes next. Okay, let's do it.
Think of a heavy iron door hinge.
Now, imagine that hinge has been submerged in salt water for, say, 30 years.
>> Oh, well. Okay.
>> It's completely rusted over, right?
Fused into a single solid lump of iron.
You can't just take a crowbar and pry that fused hinge open.
>> No, of course not. If you apply that much mechanical force, you're going to rip the door right off the frame, or just shatter the wall it's attached to.
Which uh translates biologically to catastrophic skull fractures. Exactly.
>> If a surgeon simply tried to pry Sky's jaw open by force, the surrounding facial bones, which, remember, were already compromised from the trauma, they would just splinter.
>> Right. Furthermore, the normal anatomical landmarks that a surgeon uses to navigate safely around arteries or major facial nerves, they simply didn't exist anymore.
>> They were just gone. Swallowed up inside that block of abnormal bone. So repairing the old hinge was entirely off the table. The team had to figure out how to invent a brand new one. Yes.
And the search for that solution takes us to Valencia, Spain in the summer of 2017, which introduces us to a really fascinating collaboration.
>> This part is amazing. Yeah. The veterinary surgeon leading the charge, Dr. Jorge Llinás, realizes the scope of this facial reconstruction goes way beyond standard veterinary practice. He needed backup. Right. So he brings in Dr. Fernando Gómez López, who is a human maxillofacial surgeon.
And bridging human and veterinary medicine like this, it's a massive indicator of how unprecedented the trauma was. They knew they were flying blind.
>> So they broke the process down into phases. In June, they performed the first surgery, which was strictly about damage control. Preparing the biological canvas, as it were.
>> Exactly. The soft tissue phase. The logs detail this intensive surgical cleaning.
They had to excise necrotic dead tissue that was harboring infection deep in the facial cavities. Cuz you can't build on a foundation of infection.
>> Right. And they also took a skin flap from the lip to surgically close the empty, exposed right eye socket.
>> Which is so crucial. You cannot implant new materials or attempt complex orthopedic reconstruction if the surrounding tissue is actively fighting a bacterial war. Makes sense. That first surgery was all about creating a clean, vascularized environment. The tissue needs really good blood flow to whatever radical joint reconstruction they were planning to do next. Which brings us to the real breakthrough in mid-August. The team had spent months developing a surgical plan to use a custom-made silicone prosthesis to replace the fused joint.
>> Right. A synthetic hinge. But once they got Sky into the operating room and actually opened the site, they made a highly specific, radical pivot. They changed the plan entirely.
>> They performed an ostectomy using surgical saws to meticulously cut away that massive block of fused bone. But instead of inserting the synthetic silicone joint, >> This is the part that is just wild.
>> fat from Sky's own abdomen.
Specifically, a structure called the falciform ligament, and they packed that abdominal fat into the empty space in his jaw. This right here is the exact moment medical repetition becomes medical creation.
>> It's unbelievable.
>> ligament is this thick fold of fatty tissue [music] attached to the liver and the abdominal wall. In a lot of routine abdominal surgeries, it's actually considered in the way. Oh, really?
>> Yeah. It's often simply removed or ignored. But Dr. Llinás and his team [music] recognized its unique biological properties.
>> Okay, wait. I'm stuck on this mechanic.
I really am.
>> Yeah. Apart. [music] You're telling me they put soft, squishy abdominal fat into a space that has to withstand the massive mechanical force of a dog chewing bone. Yes. How does that soft tissue provide leverage?
Like, how does it not just instantly pulverize under the pressure of the jaw muscles? It feels entirely counterintuitive until you look at the mechanism of an interpositional arthroplasty.
>> An interpositional arthroplasty.
>> Right. See, the surgeons weren't trying to rebuild a load-bearing bone-on-bone joint. They were trying to create a functional pseudo joint.
>> Okay. A pseudo joint.
>> Because the primary risk after cutting away that fused bone is that the body will immediately try to heal the fracture.
>> By sending in those osteoblasts again.
Exactly. Fusing the jaw shut a second time.
>> Ah. So they needed a spacer. Exactly.
They needed a spacer. The falciform ligament acts as a highly vascularized fibrous shock absorber. It's packed with adult stem cells and has this incredible blood supply.
>> Wow. So when they packed it between the freshly cut ends of the jaw bone, it essentially confused the body's healing response.
>> a physical barrier. Yes. So the bone couldn't bridge the gap.
Over time, that fat graft integrates with the surrounding tissue. It becomes a dense, pliable, fibrous cushion.
>> That is fascinating. And it allows the massive temporalis and masseter muscle, the chewing muscles, to pull the jaw open and closed without grinding raw bone on raw bone.
>> So they bypassed the need for rigid bone entirely. Yes.
>> They just relied on the surrounding muscle architecture to act as a suspension system, with the fat graft as the bumper.
That is a brilliant biological hack.
>> It really is.
>> And it completely removes the risk of the body rejecting a synthetic silicone implant, because the fat is Sky's own tissue. It is an elegant solution, but it is also a massive physiological gamble. Why is that?
>> The success of an autotransplant like this relies entirely on the body's ability to keep that grafted tissue alive, all while simultaneously managing the trauma of the surgery itself.
>> Right. Which means the surgery, as incredible as it was, is only half the story. Barely half. Surviving the procedure is entirely different from the body actually accepting this foreign biological hack. So what does recovery from something like that actually look like? It's intense.
>> Yeah. The hospitalization logs from August 2017 give us a very sober look at the razor-thin margin of this recovery.
The pharmacological cocktail alone is just intense. When you look at the medical logs, you see a heavily suppressed system. Yeah. Sky was put on Bupre, which is a potent opioid to manage the acute pain of having, you know, part of his skull sawed out.
>> Understandably. He was on Onsior, a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory, to control the massive swelling that could easily compromise his airway. And because these medications put immense stress on the gastrointestinal tract, he was also given omeprazole to prevent stomach ulcers.
>> It's a huge chemical load for a dog. And then there is the bacterial threat.
>> Right. The logs show a combination of doxycycline and Synulox. This is a very targeted broad-spectrum antibiotic approach. Because in deep maxillofacial trauma, you are dealing with a dark, moist environment that is incredibly close to the brain. Very close to the brain. You have both aerobic bacteria from the outside world and anaerobic bacteria thriving deep in the dead pockets of tissue. And the logs note a really stark clinical reality during those first few days of August.
The surgical wound had an intense smell.
Yeah, and in medical terms, that indicates active tissue necrosis.
>> The tissue is dying. Exactly. The blood supply is struggling to reach the extremities of the wound, tissue is dying, and the bacteria are basically feasting. The margin between recovery and deadly sepsis at that exact moment was incredibly narrow. So, to combat this, the logs mention the use of cold laser therapy directly on his face.
>> Which is fascinating tech. It is.
>> [music] >> Rather than cutting, this type of laser uses specific wavelengths of light. It's called photobiomodulation to penetrate the tissue. So, it's healing with light. Basically, yeah. The light energy hits the mitochondria in the cells, stimulating the production of ATP, which is essentially cellular fuel.
So, it accelerates tissue regeneration.
[music] Exactly. And it reduces inflammation at a microscopic level, giving that fat graft a fighting chance to vascularize [music] and actually survive. And remember, during all of this, the new jaw joint is incredibly fragile. Sky still couldn't use his mouth.
>> Right.
The surgical team had to place an esophageal [music] feeding tube. They made an incision in his neck and ran a tube directly down into his esophagus.
>> Wow. So, they could bypass his mouth entirely and deliver liquid nutrition straight to his stomach. You read these logs detailing the necrotic smells, the heavy opioids, the feeding tubes, and the laser therapies.
>> Yeah. And you expect the patient to be completely flatlined. Just a shell fighting for survival. Exactly. But the behavioral notes from the veterinary staff provide an absolute contrast to that. They really do. The notes from August 4th and 5th, just days after this massive cranial reconstruction, explicitly state that Sky is animated.
>> Animated.
>> Yes. He is walking around the clinic. He is urinating and defecating normally. He is accepting his tube feedings with a massive appetite.
>> It's unbelievable. During the surgery, the anesthesiologist had to administer norepinephrine just to keep his blood pressure from crashing.
Yet, practically the moment he wakes up, he projects this unbelievable drive. The visual sources from this period are striking, too. You see videos of a golden dog with severe, shocking scarring and stitches across a sunken half of his head. It's a jarring image.
It is, but the expression in his one remaining eye is incredibly calm. There is no panic there. There is this dignified, serene strength that almost defies biological logic. It makes me think of an engine that is somehow running perfectly.
Humming along while the actual chassis of the car is being dismantled, welded, and entirely rebuilt around it.
>> That's a great way to put it.
>> The core drive never stutters, even while the surrounding structure is in total chaos. That captures the essence of this recovery perfectly. And it speaks to a much deeper insight found in the rescue organization's reflective essays. Which is?
>> That saving Sky was never about attempting to return him to normal. The original blueprint was gone. According to standard cosmetic or anatomical metrics, he would never be normal again.
Right. But this level of intervention proves that life doesn't require a flawless structure to be deeply functional. It is about building a new, robust life directly on top of the ruins, carrying the scars without losing a single ounce of the capacity for joy.
That serene engine, pushing through the daily grueling medical grind, eventually leads us to a singular, triumphant milestone. It does.
>> Let's look at the culmination of this timeline, because the moment the surgical gamble pays off is actually documented on film.
>> Yeah. The timeline hits mid-September 2017. The inflammation in the skull has finally subsided.
>> The abdominal fat graft has successfully integrated, forming that fibrous pseudo joint without being rejected or calcifying into bone. And a video update goes viral online. For the first time since the brutal attack in Romania, Sky opens his mouth.
>> It gives me chills. He is filmed standing over a bowl, eating solid pieces of turkey completely on his own.
The esophageal feeding tube is gone. The jaw muscles have adapted to the new suspension system. And the fat graft is holding the pressure. It is literally the physical manifestation of the impossible becoming routine. Shortly after this milestone, he is officially discharged from the hospital in Valencia.
The rescue organization flies him back to his adoptive family in Cologne, Germany. Home at last. And the follow-up sources confirm that the ankylosis never returned.
He goes on to live a fully functional, incredibly happy life. He runs in the forest, he plays with toys, he chooses food. Just a dog being a dog. Yes.
His case went so far around the world that Let's Adopt received emails from people who decided to pursue veterinary medicine specifically because they saw the biological ingenuity used to save Sky. It's so profound. You know, when we step back and synthesize the broader implications of all these medical logs and surgical essays, Sky acts as a profound mirror for you, the listener.
>> What do you mean? He reflects two simultaneous truths about the human condition back at us. On one side, you have the terrifying capacity for destruction, you know, the person holding the shovel in Romania.
>> Right, the blunt force trauma. But reflecting back in the exact same mirror is the extraordinary capacity for human intelligence and compassion. Oh, I see.
You have the global network of donors, the rescue workers who refused to accept the standard protocol, and the surgeons who looked at a ruined skull and dared to invent a new joint out of abdominal fat.
>> Yeah. Sky represents the living boundary between the unbearable and the possible.
I've been turning over a question while reviewing the pharmacology, the surgical creativity, and the immense resources poured into this single dog. What's the question? Extreme cases like Sky's are obviously pursued to save the animal in front of the surgeon.
But reviewing the lengths humanity will go to, reinventing joints, flying across continents, pushing the boundaries of cross-species surgery, it feels like there's a part of this that is fundamentally necessary for us.
Necessary for us, the humans.
>> Yeah. We seem to need to prove to ourselves that our capacity to repair the damage we inflict is infinitely stronger than the damage itself. That philosophical tension runs through the entire core of this deep dive. If we connect the specific medical mechanics to the bigger picture, every time Dr. Lenaers and his team cut away that fused bone and packed it with life-saving tissue, they weren't just repairing a mandible.
>> They were doing something more. They were actively repairing our collective integrity. It is a refusal to let the worst actions of humanity be the final word.
>> Wow.
To recap this incredible journey, we started with a destroyed, fused jaw in Romania.
The dog facing a biological lock-in and a medical death sentence.
>> Yeah. We tracked the physiology of ankylosis, the journey to a specialized team in Spain, and the unprecedented fat graft surgery that bypassed rigid bone to create a functional pseudo joint.
>> total medical pivot. We walked through the grueling pharmacology of the recovery, the razor-thin margin of tissue necrosis, and finally the triumphant return to a full, joyful life in Germany. A dog who, against every anatomical rule, reclaimed his future.
It is an absolute master class in seeing beyond the missing pieces and utilizing whatever is left to its absolute maximum potential. So, as we wrap up this deep dive, I want to leave you with a final, lingering thought to explore on your own.
>> Okay. Think about the rusted hinges in your own world. Think about the structures in your own life, your career, or your community that feel completely fused, broken, or ruined.
>> Right. When something is irreparable and the original blueprint is completely destroyed, >> Yeah. did you just walk away?
Or, do you, like Sky's surgical team, realize that true salvation isn't about perfectly restoring the past, but having the audacity to invent an entirely new way to function?
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