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According to bossip.com:

Via CBSNews

Surgeons at Johns Hopkins University Hospital in Baltimore have successfully  implanted a new ear on a woman who lost one due to cancer.

But this was no simple transplant – doctors had to build her ear using  cartilage pulled from other parts of her body,  then surgically implanted it on  her arm to allow it to grow skin before re-attaching it to her head.

Sherrie Walter, a 42-year-old retail sales manager from Bel Air, Md.,  underwent the painstaking series of operations that began in January 2011 and  ended with a new ear by September 2012. She had been diagnosed with basal cell  carcinoma, the most common type of skin cancer in the United States. Many types  of basal cell carcinomas are slow-growing, however this particular case was  aggressive.

She was first diagnosed in 2008 and had intense radiation therapy and regular  biopsies, but in 2010 she saw some blood in her left ear and learned her cancer  returned. The cancer had also spread to nearby parts of her skull and salivary  glands, so she needed her ear and other surrounding head, neck, gland, lymph and  skull tissues removed to save her life.

How the hell did they do it you ask? Well…

So in what’s considered one of the most complicated ear reconstructions ever,  doctors removed pieces of her rib cartilage to assemble the new ear structure.  The skinless structure was then surgically implanted under her forearm skin for  four months, to allow it to stretch and grow skin and be nourished by the  forearm’s blood vessels.

“We started making jokes just to try to get used to it and I was like, ‘Can  you hear me? Can you hear me?’ Sherrie’s husband Damien said to CBS  Baltimore.

Walter’s surgeon Dr. Patrick Byrne, associate professor in  otolaryngology-head and neck surgery at the Johns Hopkins University School of  Medicine, then surgically removed the ear from Walter’s arm, and connected it to  blood vessels in the head and began to sculpt it to look like a functioning ear.  A special hearing aid allows her to hear from her left side.

“I thought of this exact strategy many years before and really was looking  for the right patient to try it on,” Byrne told CBS Baltimore.

She still has two more minor surgeries to go, but doctors hope the ear will  last for decades.

Read more at http://bossip.com/655070/holla-if-ya-hear-me-surgeons-at-johns-hopkins-university-grew-a-replacement-ear-on-womans-forearm-43081/#LK4e1u5dmO0zQWYj.99

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