Chapter 2826: One More Powerful Than the Other



To be precise, it is a cerebral arteriovenous malformation. When communicating with clinical doctors, it is a habit to cut words and sentences, anyway, the other party can understand. You said that you sent him to the neurosurgery department for treatment, so what else can it be but brain energy?

Cerebral arteriovenous malformation is very easy to understand from the literal meaning. It refers to abnormal deformation of the arteries and veins in the brain. Simply put, the arteries and veins become a lump.

Arteries and veins can be called the transportation system for blood flow in the human body. If the main traffic routes of water pipes become numb, the results are nothing more than blockages or a direct burst of the pipe.

Where does the cause of this disease come from?

After leaving pediatrics and returning to adult medicine, we find that we have to come back to the question of whether this disease is more of a congenital or acquired problem. This disease is generally considered to be caused by problems in the angiogenesis process during the embryonic period.

Considering that the spinocerebellar degeneration we just mentioned is also said to be a genetic factor, it seems that neurosurgery is the hardest hit area for congenital diseases?

That is not the case. The pathogenesis is the embryonic medical inference mentioned above, but this disease is not uncommon in conjunction with other diseases. For example, various cranial malignant tumors, infections and other factors also affect angiogenesis and become pathological, causing this disease.

"Are we going to need microneurosurgical surgery to remove it?" While listening to Xie and Dr. Jin talking, Wei Shangquan and several other classmates followed suit to discuss.

If it is a cerebral arteriovenous malformation, the most commonly used surgical method in the past was to ligate the artery that supplies blood to the "ma ball", in an attempt to starve the "ma ball" to death. Later, it was found that the recurrence rate of this surgery was very high, and the method now adopted is to completely remove the "ma ball".

...

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Cutting the "mochi" only proves once again that even the most precise surgical operations can never withstand the cunning of the disease and can only be done with one cut.

"He was hospitalized in the Department of Neurology and then transferred here." Pan Shihua and Geng took the medical records within the group and quickly found the hospitalization record of Dr. Jin's friend. They flipped it open and took a quick look at it and said.

"Conservative treatment in the Department of Neurology doesn't work, so we are transferred to the Department of Neurosurgery for surgery?" Wei asked again if this was true.

"Shangquan, you have to know that if this disease is treated conservatively by internal medicine, surgery is generally not possible."

After being refuted by classmates Pan and Geng, Wei once again realized that he was: a poor student.

No, it’s because his classmates are so awesome.

Each one is more powerful than the other.

If you don’t believe it, just look at what Xie, the best student in their class, said.

Xie had never seen the patient's medical records, but he was able to communicate with Dr. Jin without any hindrance: "After a period of conservative treatment for hydrocephalus, cerebral arteriovenous malformation was discovered. In other words, internal medicine can never solve hydrocephalus and the condition has a tendency to worsen, so we can only switch to surgery to treat hydrocephalus. At the same time, conservative treatment for cerebral arteriovenous malformation is performed to see if there is any improvement, and then we can make further plans. Maybe these two diseases affect each other."

"Have you seen my friend?" Dr. Jin naturally assumed that she had seen the patient, otherwise how would she know it was hydrocephalus without him telling her.

It cannot be said that hydrocephalus and cerebral arteriovenous malformations are completely unrelated, but it is generally difficult to associate them.

Xie Wanying denied: "No. I came back to the neurosurgery department the first day. When I came here, I passed by the nurses' station. When I greeted the nurses, I took a look at the patient list card at the nurses' station."

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