Famous Among Top Surgeons in the 90s

Chapter 2089: No Need to Be Surprised

Famous Among Top Surgeons in the 90s

Chapter 2089: No Need to Be Surprised

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Chapter 2089: Chapter 2089: No Need to Be Surprised

This is also why doctors always emphasize the importance of postoperative reviews and long-term medication to patients.

"Have you found it?" Unable to keep up with the surgery, Lin Chenrong had to ask her for the result.

"There are three."

What!?

The observers on site suddenly realized that the one truly throwing a bomb among them was not the surgeon, but her, Student Xie. "Did you say three?" Lin Chenrong held up three fingers, not quite believing his ears, and asked her. He couldn’t find even one, yet she said there were three.

"There are three," Xie Wanying confirmed.

"Three together?"

"No, two are relatively close, and the other is quite far apart," Xie Wanying replied.

Three, so many. Could this situation have exceeded the pre-operative estimate of neurosurgery? Lin Chenrong and the others only saw the neurosurgeons collectively fall silent.

Cardiologists might express surprise at the number three.

For neurosurgeons, this disease is not unfamiliar, and they didn’t feel the need for astonishment.

Multi-aneurysm Intracranial (MIA) is not an uncommon case clinically. It accounts for an average of over twenty percent of the total incidence of intracranial aneurysms. The common age group is just around Doctor Hu’s age. Female patients are 3.5 times more than male patients, with some patients having slightly higher blood pressure as a characteristic. Thinking carefully, it’s not too surprising that this patient was found to have such results.

The reason for the neurosurgeons’ silence might be how to handle this disease.

The clinical management principle for MIA is that it’s best to remove as many aneurysms as are found in one go to avoid a second surgery as much as possible.

Why must it be done in one go? Because the etiology of MIA involves both congenital factors and acquired factors, but congenital factors dominate. It can be said that aneurysms are abnormal bulges caused by congenital defects of the arterial wall. Thus, many patients’ aneurysms have grown with them for years until they are found. When discovered, the aneurysm is either about to burst or has already burst.

In other words, these aneurysms generally enlarge over time, and when they reach a certain size, they may burst, endangering the patient’s life. Before any symptoms appear, routine checks won’t reveal anything, and nothing is done if unknown. Once known, it definitely needs to be dealt with as early as possible to avoid the inevitable burst.

Can several aneurysms be removed at once through interventional surgery? Cardiologists are not proficient, and don’t quite understand.

Lin Chenrong returned to Jin Tianyu’s side and whispered, "Neurosurgery isn’t speaking; are they considering preparing for craniotomy?"

Unable to grasp the workings of neurosurgery, they could only gauge something from the expressions of neurosurgical colleagues. Their silence and serious expressions indicated a high likelihood that the current interventional surgery suite couldn’t handle it, and a craniotomy was a possibility.

Jin Tianyu folded his arms across his chest.

He saw Deputy Director Lv picking up the phone, seemingly contacting the third-floor operating room and anesthesiologists.

However, the final decision-maker is not this person but Cao Yong.

Moreover, the chief expert sent by the external hospital, the big boss, Director Zhai, remained silent.

In short, they could observe whether the surgeons operating in the surgery room would take the next step; if they did, it would mean neurosurgery would continue to attempt interventional surgery.

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