| |
NATIONALLY
KNOWN NEW YORK PLASTIC SURGEON WORKS MIRACLES ON DISFIGURED FACES
While
he is sought after by some of New York's most prominent women and
men for his skill at cosmetic surgery, Dr. Spinelli takes special
pleasure in
performing reconstructive surgery on people who have been disfigured
--
especially when they are young.
Eleven-year-old Nicole Colaco was playing with her golden retriever,
Max,
as she had many times before. But this time the 70-pound dog turned
on her,
crushing her skull and nose and the bones between her eyes, and
ripping off
her eyelids and nose.
Luckily for Nicole, surgeons at the hospital she was taken to called
in
Dr. Henry Spinelli, a nationally recognized plastic surgeon specializing
in
craniofacial and oculoplastic surgery. In a five-hour operation
at New York
Hospital Cornell Medical Center, Dr. Spinelli reconstructed Nicole's
face.
Using pieces of her skull that he chiseled off as a sculptor chisels
marble, Dr. Spinelli rebuilt Nicole's nose. The tendons that supported
her
eyes were reconstructed with wire and her tear ducts were remade.
The end
result: Nicole is whole again, back at school, playing ball and
living a
normal life.
To
Nicole's parents, and countless others who have suffered severe
facial
injuries, Dr. Spinelli is a miracle worker. He was the plastic surgeon
called
upon to rebuild the face, hands and chest of David Gelerntner, one
of the
victims of the Unabomber. Stories abound about his skill at performing
the
seemingly impossible.
Tanya Dnistran was coming home from a night out with her fiancé
when her
jeep struck something and rolled over, killing her fiancé.
The bones around
Tanya's face and nose were crushed, causing her eyes to sink into
her head.
While many surgeons would be unable to correct such a problem, Dr.
Spinelli knew just what to do. He split off a piece of Tanya's skull
and
created a wafer-thin bone to support her eyes, restoring Tanya's
face.
Jennifer Maxon, a 15-year-old involved in a severe car accident,
had
similar injuries to Tanya, but despite several operations surgeons
in her
home state of Pennsylvania could not repair the damage to the facial
bones
around her eyes. When she came to Dr. Spinelli two years after the
accident,
one of her eyes was sunken into her head.
Because Jennifer didn't want bone removed from her skull, Dr. Spinelli
split off pieces of her hip bone. To do so, Dr. Spinelli made a
small
incision in the bikini line and went in behind her intestines. Using
the bone
from her hip, Dr. Spinelli was able to bring her eye back into the
proper
position, making Jennifer's appearance normal again.
"Young
people like Nicole and Tanya and Jennifer have their whole
lives ahead of them. When something destroys their appearance, they
really
can't function," Dr. Spinelli said. "By combining the
techniques of
reconstructive and cosmetic surgery, using bone and soft tissue,
I can
restore both form and function for them. It is tremendously rewarding."
Listed
among the Best Doctors in America for the Northeast Region, and
the Best Doctors in the New York Metro Area, Dr. Spinelli is on
staff at New York Hospital Cornell Medical Center and maintains
an office on Fifth Avenue. He holds a medical degree from New York
University and was formally trained in ophthalmology at Manhattan
Eye, Ear and Throat Hospital, general surgery at Columbia-Presbyterian
and plastic surgery at New York University.
|