After changing, Professor Rudolf Wagner went to the control console room outside the operating theater.
Through the lead-lined glass, he saw that the patient's posture was strange. Before he could take a closer look, a short woman asked, "Who are you?"
Department Chief Xia from the gastroenterology department was confused when she saw Professor Rudolf Wagner.
"Chief Xia, this is Professor Rudolf Wagner from Heidelberg University," Xie Yiren introduced. Xie Yiren had assisted Zheng Ren with many surgeries last night. She knew the professor's background and introduced him to him.
"…" Department Chief Xia was speechless. Since when did a German professor visit the hospital? Based on the hospital's conduct, if a German expert or professor came for an exchange, the publicity would have been overwhelming.
Could it be fake?
She looked at Professor Rudolf Wagner in confusion.
"I'm here to see Zheng, beautiful lady," Professor Rudolf Wagner explained in broken Mandarin.
"Dr. Zheng? What for? "Department Chief Xia asked.
"Zheng has the Hands of God," Professor Rudolf Wagner explained. Professor Rudolf Wagner explained, "I wanted to ask him to form a research team for a new surgical method, but Zheng rejected me."
Department Chief Xia was speechless …
Her first reaction was that this guy, who looked like a foreign expert, was a liar and in cahoots with Zheng Ren.
However, on second thought, there was no point in lying to her.
Could it be true?
She was confused.
"Professor, your specialization is …" Department Chief Xia asked.
"Interventional surgery," Professor Rudolf Wagner said. Professor Rudolf Wagner said, "I started doing TIPS surgery twenty years ago. So far, I've completed more than three hundred TIPS surgeries. I'm one of the doctors in the world with the most TIPS surgeries."
The professor knew that the number was impressive.
It was rare for an interventional surgeon to perform more than a hundred TIPS surgeries worldwide. Professor Rudolf Wagner was way ahead, having performed more than three hundred TIPS surgeries.
No one else could catch up to him in terms of experience.
Especially when it came to TIPS surgeries that required experience and luck … Professor Rudolf Wagner felt depressed when he thought about luck.
He had tried to improve on this luck-dependent surgery many years ago, but to no avail.
Perhaps this was God's test for mankind. The professor always comforted himself with this reason.
Department Chief Xia's eyes lit up when she heard Professor Rudolf Wagner's words.
If … if what the professor said was true, then there was hope for her classmate.
To be honest, Chief Xia did not think that a young doctor like Zheng Ren could perform a TIPS surgery, especially an emergency surgery.
If it was possible, the probability would be so low that it would make one's hair stand on end.
In this surgery, there was a huge difference between emergency and non-emergency, hematemesis and stubborn ascites.
In general, slow-diagnosis TIPS surgery, the patient lay flat with the neck under local anesthesia. If the patient felt pain during the puncture, a dose of Dolantin would solve the problem.
As for emergency TIPS surgery, the patient was vomiting blood. He definitely could not use the supine position. Otherwise, if the patient vomited blood and there was aspiration, it would be fatal.
Therefore, the patient could only use the awkward surgical position of lying on the side …
Professor Rudolf Wagner was also surprised to discover this after observing the situation in the operating room.
Zheng's guts were simply too big!
This was a TIPS surgery. Any slight error would be enough to cause the surgery to fail.
It was his first time doing it, yet he had to use such an awkward position.
Professor Rudolf Wagner could already see Zheng Ren's dejected expression after the surgery failed.
Let me save you, Oriental boy.
The professor thought to himself proudly.
In the operating room, the jugular vein puncture and catheterization had been completed.
The highlight of the surgery was next. Professor Rudolf Wagner crossed his arms and stared at the screen.
The puncture needle was inserted, its speed slow due to the patient's constant hematemesis. It was a cautious move. This emergency surgery was far more difficult than slow-diagnosis surgery.
Meanwhile, the live broadcast room in Xinglin Garden went crazy.
Emergency TIPS surgery to stop the bleeding! This was the most difficult surgery the surgeon had performed since the start of the live broadcast.
Some people did not understand the difficulty of TIPS surgery, but after listening to the excited general surgeons and interventional surgeons, most of them understood.
They did not know the procedure, but portal-azygos disconnection was a textbook procedure. Everyone had learned it in school.
The surgeon was truly out of this world!
Emergency, lateral position, TIPS surgery … If not for the surgeon's success rate every time, I would have judged the surgery a failure.
Wait for the news of the surgery's success, young man. I have a feeling that the surgeon will go from one victory to the next.
Speaking of which, the postoperative complications of TIPS surgery must be a headache. A few days ago, we received a patient after TIPS surgery. He had intermittent hepatic encephalopathy for a month after the surgery.
There was no other way. If he did not do it, he would die. Should he do it or not?
Now, let's start the guessing game. Guess how many punctures the surgeon will fail before he succeeds?
Many doctors did not understand the significance of the number of punctures because it was too specialized. As long as one was not a general surgeon or interventional surgeon, they would not be able to come into contact with such a difficult surgery.
In the country, hospitals that could carry out this kind of surgery were at least in provincial capitals.
Or they could hire experts or professors to perform freelance surgeries. One or two successful cases would be enough for the hospital to brag about for a year.
Although it was meaningless, the hospital would never tire of it.
This was also a specialty.
Twenty times!
I felt that the surgeon would fail. I saw the patient's body moving on the screen. He was probably vomiting blood.
Speaking of which, how would it appear if it was in a lateral position …
The machine could rotate, but the angle of rotation would increase the difficulty of the surgery. I was beginning to sympathize with the surgeon. Under such circumstances, he still had to work hard to complete the surgery.
I felt that ten times would be enough. Last time, our hospital invited a professor from Imperial Capital to perform ten punctures and succeeded.
That was luck. A few years ago, we also invited a famous professor from Sorcery Capital to perform TIPS surgery. There were zero failures. I estimated that the patient's liver was punctured, but he did not complete the portal vein and hepatic vein puncture.
Soon, everyone vividly demonstrated the difficulty of the surgery based on their own personal experience.
Many doctors were already intimidated by TIPS surgery after hearing the descriptions of their peers.
How was this a f * cking surgery? It was practically the King of Hell trying to save lives.
The surgery depended on luck. Dozens of punctures, serious liver damage, and a high probability of hepatic encephalopathy after the surgery.
Either point gave the doctors enough reason to give up the surgery.
If they did not do it, the patient's life or death had nothing to do with them.
If they did it, if the patient died or the hepatic encephalopathy was more serious, there was a high probability of a medical dispute.
This … the surgeon was really brave and fearless.
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