%0 Journal Article %T First Reconstructive Plastic Surgery of the Perineum in a Hominin <i>Pan paniscus</i> (Bonobo) and Plea by a Plastic Surgeon for Surgery for the Benefit of All Hominins (Members of the Human Lineage) %A Kapay Kibadi %J Open Journal of Animal Sciences %P 336-344 %@ 2161-7627 %D 2023 %I Scientific Research Publishing %R 10.4236/ojas.2023.133025 %X We present, for the first time, the repair by plastic surgery procedures of a large loss of perineal substance in a bonobo (hominin Pan paniscus). A 20-year-old male bonobo living in captivity in the Lola Ya Bonobo Sanctuary in Kinshasa in the Democratic Republic of the Congo was attacked by another bonobo. It was a large perineal wound through which urine flowed, located between the penis and the testicles, taking part of the anterior and posterior urethra, the bladder, as well as the elements of the spermatic duct. To repair the large loss of perineal substance, a pedicled flap of scrotal skin was removed, and then turned over, cutaneous surface on the trench of the loss of bladder substance and the urethral lumen. The postoperative course was satisfactory with healing by the first intention of the surgical wound, despite the wild postoperative behavior of the patient (removal of the vesicourethral catheter and protective plaster). We observed in the short term an urethro-cutaneous fistula, left in natural healing. The reconstructive surgery procedures applied in humans can also be applied with satisfactory results in bonobos, a species in the process of extension and whose members are our closest cousins. The bonobo is genetically close to humans. Based on this first successful experience, we advocate for reconstructive plastic surgery for all hominins (members of the human lineage), if indicated. %K Bonobo %K Perineal Trauma %K Extensive Loss of Soft Tissues %K Reconstructive Plastic Surgery %K Congo %U http://www.scirp.org/journal/PaperInformation.aspx?PaperID=126508