Or so Italian surgeon Sergio Canavero says

Sep 11, 2015 17:24 GMT  ·  By

Earlier this year, Italian surgeon Sergio Canavero announced to the world that he would soon be performing the first ever full head transplant on Valery Spiridonov, a 30-year-old computer scientist in Russia suffering from progressive muscular atrophy bound to eventually kill him. 

Sergio Canavero says a full head transplant is Valery Spiridonov's only chance to overcome his condition. Since his muscular atrophy is advancing at a rapid pace, having his head detached from his body and fitted onto a new one is the computer scientist's only shot at survival.

Understandably, the medical community did not take lightly to the Italian surgeon's plans to chop off Valery Spiridonov's head and put it on a new body. They even started calling him Dr. Frankenstein.

All the same, it looks like Sergio Canavero is determined not to let such remarks bring him down. He will perform the world's first ever full head transplant and he will do it no later than December 2017.

At least there are some people who believe in him

It might be that most medical experts think him, well, insane, but Sergio Canavero does not stand completely alone in this endeavor. He's found a friend and supporter in Ren Xiaoping, a surgeon at China's Harbin Medical University who's volunteered to help him perform the transplant.

This means the intervention will probably play out in China, an organizational detail Italian surgeon Sergio Canavero seems quite happy about.

“Dr. Ren is the only person in the world able to lead this project,” he said in a recent interview. “With its outstanding organizational ability and group operational ability, China might be the best choice to carry out head transplants,” the surgeon went on to add, as cited by Science Alert.

In case anyone was wondering, Ren Xiaoping isn't a novice to the art of chopping up living creatures and then mixing and matching body parts. He's so far performed head transplants on about 1,000 mice and, apparently, cannot wait to graduate to operating on monkeys and people.