answer about something
1. I saw someone saying that Bian Que can’t do surgery. In fact, in "Liezi."
It is recorded in Tang Wenpian that Bian Que performed an unprecedented heart-changing operation on Lu Gonghu and Zhao Qiying. Friends who are interested can go and take a look.
Of course, some friends will also say that this is a fictional myth. What I want to say is that my novel is also a fictional myth. If you are serious, you will lose.
2. I saw someone saying that the separation of the cervical spine and the craniocerebral will cause death. So let’s take a look at this news:
On June 3, 2004, the American "Arizona Republic" and ABC (ABC) and other media reported that Rich Buck, a 13-year-old boy in Arizona, was broken in a car accident on April 10, and his head and body were connected only by his skin and some muscles. Such serious injuries usually have quadriplegia even if they don't die. However, after a precise "joint operation" at Phoenix Children's Hospital, Buck is now able to go out in a wheelchair. He is really an absolute "miracle boy"!
Accidental car accident broke the cervical spine
It is reported that 13-year-old American teenager Ritchie Buck lives in West Phoenix, Arizona, and is an 8th grade student in the local "Desert Sands Middle School". On April 10 this year, Buck was practicing cycling on a road near his home. Suddenly, a car rushed towards him at a highway speed of 80 kilometers per hour. Buck had no time to avoid it, and he was hit into the air with his car, and then fell heavily to the ground, unconscious on the spot.
When Buck was rushed to the Phoenix Children's Hospital, the doctor immediately conducted a comprehensive examination of him and found that his injuries were very serious - not only Buck's body had almost been "bumped", but also, because Buck's ligament in his neck was also torn in a car accident, only a little skin and muscles were left on his head and connected to his body. What's more terrifying is that under the influence of huge momentum, Buck's skull and cervical spine were completely separated! Kim Manvining, a neurosurgeon at Phoenix Children's Hospital, recalled: "At that time, his skull had been separated from the first cervical spine, and it seemed that it might fall from his body at any time."
Titanium rod nails inserted into the neck
However, the doctors did not give up the last glimmer of hope. They decided to carry out a "joint surgery" with great risk, trying to help Buck escape the almost inevitable paralysis. On April 11, the treatment team led by Dr. Manvining officially began the operation. First, the doctors carefully reconnected Buck's skull and the cervical spine with a metal fixing system made of titanium rods and several steel screws. Then, Dr. Manvining injected a protein into the fixing system that can promote bone growth so that the skull and the cervical spine can be joined faster. Finally, the treatment team sutured the ligaments and muscle tissue in the neck. The entire operation process was extremely complicated and lasted for more than 10 hours.
Going out for activities more than a month after surgery
But to Dr. Manvining's surprise, the "joint surgery" was much better than expected. On April 12th - just one day after the operation, the doctor found that Buck's brain could command his right leg to perform slight movement. In addition, Buck's mother Amanda was also surprised to find that Buck had woken up from a coma. Although he was wearing a ventilator mask and could not speak, he was trying to communicate with his family in blinking!
Miracles followed one after another. Under the careful care of the doctor, soon after, Buck's right hand and left leg began to partially restore perception and motor ability. Although his left hand is still paralyzed, the parts from his left hand to above his elbow have begun to have consciousness. Recently, the reporter saw in the hospital that Buck was able to stand for 3 seconds and had also recovered his ability to speak.
Buck told reporters that he felt energetic now. In late May, he was still sitting in a wheelchair and accompanied by medical staff to attend the graduation ceremony of his eighth-grade classmates in the school. At the graduation ceremony, he not only went on stage to accept the gift from the principal, but also gave a speech in public. Buck said: "I didn't feel tired that day. At that time, I joked with my classmates: 'Look! My head was connected to my body with screws!'"
One in a million chance of surviving
Dr. Manvining said with emotion that Buck's friends and family now call him "Miracle Boy", because it is a miracle that a person as seriously injured as him can survive, not to mention that the subsequent surgery is so satisfactory, and the chance of such a thing is probably less than one in a million.
According to Dr. Manvining, Buck may be able to recover his walking ability in half a year, but whether he can recover completely remains to be tested. Despite this, Buck's family was still very happy, saying that this was already "a blessing in disgrace." Mother Amanda said excitedly: "What else can I complain about? This is simply a grand prize given to us by God!"
Chapter completed!