Chapter 1038 [1038] New Idea of Surgery
An artificial blood vessel was built to connect the right atrium and the inferior vena cava, bypassing the obstructed inferior vena cava.
Another doctor proposed further ideas based on realistic pictures.
"It doesn't have to be cavity-atrial flow, it could be entero-atrial flow or splenic-atrial flow. Since it is impossible to determine which method is better, they use TEE to estimate which operation is most beneficial to the patient."
Intestinal-atrial circulation and splenic-atrial circulation are the same as the cavity-atrial circulation. As the name suggests, the inferior vena cava is replaced by the superior mesenteric vein or splenic vein to connect with the right atrium, and an artificial blood vessel is also built to bypass the obstructed segment.
"Everything you say makes sense, but if Dr. Tao's team wants to try this, I think it can be a little more daring. They can do a mixture of these circulation techniques."
This conjecture may be the ultimate answer.
Much research has been published in medical journals on circulation and Budd-Chiari syndrome. So colleagues are no strangers when talking about it, and they are sure that what is done in the operation screen must be the circulation technique.
The colleagues in the outer courtyard next door seemed to have reached a conclusion, but the area where the surgeons of the National Association of China sat was almost silent, and it was silent, which made people feel professional dignity.
It should be said that when they saw this unexpected operation scene, they were as shocked as their counterparts in the outer hospital.
The main reason is that I have never seen such a bold and unconventional surgical method in the hepatobiliary surgery department of my hospital. The people in the hepatobiliary surgery group are conservatives. Don't ever point out that they do things that seem to be incomprehensible in an operation that has not yet occurred in an emergency. Besides, let alone hepatobiliary surgery, probably no one in other departments would dare to do it.
"Is Tao Zhijie doing it?" Yu Xuexian was very suspicious, and turned around and asked in a low voice about the Puwai Er gang. He is a physician who seldom visits the operating room, unlike the general surgeon who understands Tao Zhijie's operation.
There seemed to be some hesitation on Puwai Er's face.
"It's classmate Xiao Xie." Sun Yubo let out a voice, and then realized that he seemed to have slipped his tongue, so he quickly covered his quick-talking mouth, and looked nervously at Tan Kelin, for fear of being scolded.
Tan Kelin actually didn't like to let his proud disciple come out to show off.
"Who are you talking about? Xie Wanying?" Yu Xuexian thought he had heard it wrong, so he turned around and asked Zhu Huicang again, "They said it was her, do you know?"
Zhu Huicang shook his head, and looked back at him: how could he know, if he is not in the operating room, how can he know what is going on in the operating room.
People outside the general public talk nonsense. Yu Xuexian thought.
On the opposite side, some of the doctors in the outer hospital who like to talk were very excited, because they were intoxicated by their own ideas, and continued to debate endlessly.
"Dr. Tao tried on each blood vessel to find out which blood vessel connection has the least impact on the heart and is most in line with the patient's original hemodynamics. In this way, once a new blood vessel connection is established, it is equivalent to a major surgery. Collateral circulation can minimize the risk of the most terrible bleeding during surgery. Because there seems to be something wrong with the patient's heart."
These people who spoke seemed to be roundworms in Tao Zhijie's stomach. They thought they knew Tao Zhijie's surgical thinking very well, and praised Tao Zhijie loudly.
"This is a new idea that we didn't think of, and it broadens our way of thinking about surgery. As a well-known young and middle-aged hepatobiliary surgery expert in China, Dr. Tao is going to let us continue to open our eyes today."