Zheng Ren exited the System's operating theater and took a drag on his cigarette. He snuffed it out and carefully placed the remaining half of the Ziyun into the pack.
Chang Yue had once laughed at him for this.
However, Zheng Ren was already used to it. There was no need to change it.
The patient was already in bed when he arrived at the operating theater. Dr. Zhou stood in the operating theater and greeted Zheng Ren.
"Brother Zhou, you're here." Zheng Ren began to scrub in.
"It would be rude of me not to accompany you so late at night," Dr. Zhou said with a smile.
"By the way, who's the person inside?" Doctor Zhou gestured with his chin and asked about Professor Rudolf Wagner's identity.
"Oh, a German professor. He's here to take a look," Zheng Ren answered nonchalantly.
"…" Dr. Zhou was speechless.
A German professor here to observe? What was that supposed to be called a visit? You're like a grandson, letting the German professor do all the work while you're standing outside, laughing and chatting like a department head.
Doctor Zhou had some questions in his heart, but he only smiled and did not raise them.
"Which university is the professor from?" he asked a neutral question.
"Professor Rudolf Wagner from Heidelberg University," Zheng Ren answered. Seeing that the professor inside had already made preoperative preparations, he greeted Doctor Zhou and entered the operating theater.
Rudolf Wagner, Heidelberg. Why did the name sound so familiar?
The surgery began.
In Xinglin Garden, another surgery broadcast was happily ushered in.
The interventional surgeon from the second-class Grade A hospital in Horqin Right Middle Banner had set a special ringtone on his phone. Upon hearing it, he jumped up like Pavlov's dog and turned on his phone at lightning speed.
They were having dinner after the surgery. The chief of general surgery and the interventional surgeon were exchanging pleasantries. Suddenly, the chief picked up his phone and looked unhappy.
"It's a live broadcast from Xinglin Garden," the interventional surgeon explained.
The chief of general surgery immediately perked up. With the help of a junior doctor beside him, he logged into Xinglin Garden's surgery broadcast room.
The chief of general surgery was disappointed when he saw the patient's profile.
This was not a general surgery. Could the lumbar artery be embolized?
Anatomically speaking, the lumbar artery seemed to have branches that fed the abdomen. The results of embolization were terrifying.
Canada's medical standards were high. They could even perform this kind of surgery.
"Unfortunately, orthopedic Department Chief Han isn't here. He would be very interested." The interventional doctor stared at the surgery intently. The chief of the general surgery department thought of something and directly called Department Chief Han.
The hospital was not big. There were more than a thousand people in the hospital, and most of them were logistics staff. At least 20% of them did not work and lived off their salaries.
The chief physicians were very familiar with each other.
The live broadcast of the surgery was just a joke. He invited them to drink together and at the same time, he could brag about the surgery he performed today.
In Xinglin Garden, more than half of the people were dumbfounded after reading the brief introduction.
Can the transverse lumbar artery be embolized?
Why does it sound like nonsense?
Why did he have to embolize the lumbar artery? Who knows?
Yes, I think this is a patient with an advanced tumor. What's the point of embolizing the lumbar artery?
Thank you for the invitation. As an orthopedist, let me give you a brief explanation.
Spinal tumor resection involved the resection of the vertebral body. The operation was complicated, and there was a lot of blood loss. In order to reduce the fatal blood loss during the operation, the thoracic and lumbar spine segmental angiography and tumor embolization should be performed 24 to 48 hours before the operation.
Hmm, a while ago, our hospital carried out the first spinal tumor resection. There was no embolization, and the patient lost 6000ml of blood. It was really a case of blood transfusion and bleeding at the same time. The director of the orthopedics department was so scared that he almost peed his pants.
We don't have an interventional surgeon, so you can do it yourself. Using a gel sponge to embolize the transverse lumbar artery was actually very simple.
If it was not difficult, would the professor know how to do it? Why do I feel that, other than the appendectomy surgery that I missed, the number of live broadcasts by surgeons has decreased, but the quality has increased. Every surgery was very difficult.
The surgery had not started yet, but the live broadcast room in Xinglin Garden was filled with lively discussions.
In the hybrid operating room, Professor Rudolph had completed the insertion of the femoral artery tube and inserted the artery sheath. He was waiting for Zheng Ren to start the surgery.
Humans had no bottom line when they fell into depravity.
Just a few days ago, Professor Rudolph Wagner had been one of the world's top surgeons. He had not done this kind of preoperative preparation for at least a decade.
However, once he got used to it, he accepted his fate in the shortest time possible and became an 'outstanding' assistant.
Zheng Ren was also used to Su Yun inserting the artery sheath and performing the surgery himself. As for whether Su Yun or Professor Rudolph did the preoperative preparation, Zheng Ren did not care.
When the micro-guide wire was inserted, the surgery officially began.
When Zheng Ren deliberately avoided the transverse lumbar artery and chose to embolize the smaller branches of the artery, many orthopedic surgeons were shocked.
What was the surgeon trying to do? Did he not just insert a sponge into the transverse lumbar artery and end the surgery? The real highlight of the surgery was still the vertebral column.
That was right. Why was the surgeon embolizing the smaller arteries?
It was baffling.
Everyone did not understand. Why did a "small" surgery have to be so complicated?
Indeed, embolizing more arteries would reduce the amount of blood loss in orthopedic surgery, but it would also increase the risk of embolization.
The loss outweighed the gain.
Time ticked by. With Professor Rudolph Wagner's assistance, Zheng Ren embolized the smaller arteries one by one.
Even Professor Rudolph did not understand what he was trying to do at first.
However, the professor was a world-class interventional surgeon. Within five minutes of the embolization, he understood Zheng Ren's intention.
Professor Rudolph could sense Zheng Ren's ambition to make a 'minor' surgery a major one.
What was supposed to be a simple surgery had become extremely complicated.
Was this the reason why Zheng Ren had brought him to do the 64-slice CT scan with 3D-image reconstruction? What was he trying to show him?
Once again, Professor Rudolph was overthinking. He was excited.
Professor Rudolph had already guessed that Zheng Ren had done the 64-slice CT scan with 3D-image reconstruction before the prostate embolization.
In this surgery, Zheng Ren must be teaching him the relevant techniques of interventional embolization.
'What a selfless young man,' Professor Rudolph Wagner thought to himself.
Since the prostate interventional embolization was involved, the professor was extra serious. After all, this was his original intention.
Doctor Zhou watched Zheng Ren and the German professor perform the surgery in the control console room. He was lost.
He did not know much about interventional surgery, but Imperial Capital had told him that the surgery would only take 20 minutes.
How long had it been?
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