Just like a silt blockage in a river, it must be washed away by a large amount of river water from upstream.
But they really did it. In the monitor screen, under the breath, the foreign object suddenly moved. It was not a subtle movement, but it felt like Archimedes had really got a lever to move the earth. The foreign object slowly rotated.
Click, pop, roll. Soon after, the micro-trap was thrown out, caught the foreign object, and was slowly pulled out of the airway by the fiberoptic bronchoscope.
For a full minute, the surroundings were so quiet that no one made a sound.
The anesthesiologist was stunned: Is this okay?!
How? Why can't he understand?
To understand this operation, we actually need to review what Xie Wanying said before. She said that inflammation is chronic and evolves to this point step by step. This means that the foreign body is not actually so big that it will really get stuck here.
The cause of the stuck is more the result of the interaction of the airflow in the patient's bronchus. The foreign matter is tossed back and forth here and rubs against the tracheal wall, causing chronic inflammation. In the end, it becomes a little sticky and gets stuck here.
If the doctor can deduce how the patient's condition evolved to this situation before, he can roughly guess which corner the object is most likely to be stuck at. As long as the airflow is directed toward the stuck point where it is most vulnerable,
By pushing in the opposite direction, it is easy to pry away foreign objects.
Surrounded by a group of surgical experts, all of them were thinking deeply, and they only knew one thing: I am afraid that only she and Song Xuelin could achieve this kind of reverse deduction calculation power. Because they had heard that they had done similar feats in the hepatobiliary surgery department before.
operate.
It can be seen that Xie Wanying has applied the knowledge and skills she has learned and practiced outside the liver and gallbladder directly to the fiberoptic bronchoscope in the respiratory system. Her ability to integrate and comprehend is refreshing.
Fu Xinheng and the others began to wonder if Tao Zhijie knew about her situation.
That Buddha always smiles and doesn't talk much. If you ask, the Buddha will say you can't tell me.
However, Tao Zhijie has revealed some information. He said it before when his junior sister was born: she was brought out by Tan Kelin, who is best at separation with forceps. She is now learning and selling, and she has used it outside the liver and gallbladder, so Tao Zhijie praised her.
She did a very good job in external hepatobiliary dissection, which actually means she succeeded in following her example.
Xie Wanying definitely couldn't hear Senior Brother Tao's thick and black words.
People who are in the second level of general foreign language can hear it, so now when I hear a large group of people talking about Xie Wanying putting the skills she has developed outside the liver and gallbladder into breathing, I hum in my heart: You can't escape even if you are outside the liver and gallbladder.
Tao Zhijie asked her that day if she wanted to keep her liver and gall bladder, but when she didn't answer, he seemed to let her go.
Anyone who knows this Buddha knows that Tao Zhijie is as calm as a Buddha in his heart: there is no time to rob people, so what are you doing with your big tricks? The most important thing to do at this time is to fool people. So He Guangyou smiled and said nothing at the dinner that night
Go down.
The foreign body was removed and the patient returned to the ward smoothly.
After washing her hands, Xin Yanjun was looking for her students. Looking again, it turned out that it was the pediatrician professor from overseas who called her students over.
"Have you ever checked out the pediatric surgery atlas again?" Nie Jiamin asked with concern about Xie's homework, hoping that she would further review and study the pediatric surgery course after undergoing pediatric surgery at the last free clinic.
"I went to the library to borrow relevant books and reviewed the surgery that day."