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Maryland man dies months after receiving first pig heart transplant

A Maryland man who made history as the first person to receive a heart transplant from a pig has died, two months after the experimental procedure, hospital officials sa♊id Wednesday.

David Bennett, a 57-year-old handyman, had received the genetically modified pig heart during a last-ditch operation to save his life at the Uniℱversity of Maryland Medical Center on Jan. 7.

“His condition began deteriorating several days ago,” hospital officials . “A🐬fter it became clear that he would not recover, he was given compassionate palliative care. He was able to communicate with his family during his final hours.”

No cause of death was immediately provided, but transplant recipients can face complications like infection and rejection of organs. Doctors previously said the successful transplant showed a heart from a modified animal — known as xenotransplantation — can function in humans without immediate rejection.

Dr. Bartley Griffith, who performed the surgery, said he w♋as “devastated” by Bennett’s death.

David Bennett Jr. (right) stands next to his father’s hospital bed in Baltimore, Md., on Jan. 12, five days after doctors transplanted a pig heart into Bennett Sr. University of Maryland School of Medicine via AP

“He proved to be a brav✨e and noble patient who fought all the way to the end,” Griffith said. “We extend our sincerest condolences to his family.”

Bennett, who had terminal heart diseas🃏e, was bedridden and out of options while at the University of Maryland Medical Center in October 2021. He was placed on a heart-lung bypass machine to stay alive and was deemed ineligible for a conventional transplant, doctors said.

The US Food and Drug Administra🐟tion granted an emergency authorization for the experimental surgery on Dec. 3🔯1 in hopes of saving Bennett’s life.

Transplant recipients can face complications like infection and rejection of organs. Mark Teske/University of Maryland School ﷽of Medicine via AP, File

The transplanted heart “performed very well” for several weeks with no 🌠signs of rejection, allowing Bennett to spend time with family and partake in physical therapy to rebuild his atrophied muscles. He even watched the Super Bowl with his physical therapist, according to the University of Maryland Medical Center.

Bennett’s son, David, thanked the team of doctors for the “life-extending opportunity” given t🍒o his fath𒁃er.

“Up until the end, my father wanted to continue fighting to preserve his life and spend more time with his🍌 beloved family, including his two sisters, his two children, and his five grandchildren, and his cherished dog Lucky,” ඣDavid Bennett Jr. said in a statement.

Those “precious weeks” wouldn’t have been possible without the efღforts of Griffith’s team, Bennett said.

“We hope this story can be the beginning of hope and not the end,” he continued. “We also hope that what was learned from his surgery will benefit future patients and hopefully one day, end the organ shortage that costs so many lives each yeaꦆr.”

David Bennett Jr. told the Associated Press in January his father knew the surgery wasn’t guaranteed to work, but hadꦡ no other options to surviv🌼e.

Bennett Sr. is survived by his two sisters, his two children, and his five grandchildren. Byron Dillard via AP, File

“It was either die or do this transplan♏t,” the elder Bennett released by the medical center a day before the groundbreaking 𝓰procedure. “I want to live. I know it’s a shot in the dark, but it’s my last choice. I look forward to getting out of bed after I recover.”