Is the brain tumor growing fast? Do you need surgery?

At the moment, at Director Zhao Tianji’s online workstation, there’s a patient’s message: “I recently felt a little dizzy, disgusting, and grumpy, and went to the hospital to check out a brain tumor, and wanted to consult with the brain tumor soon. Do you need surgery?”

Director Zhao Tien Ji-ji introduced the information provided by the patient about two centimetres of cerebral membrane, which should not be related to the symptoms described by the current patient, which suggested a look at the neuronology. This membrane is recommended for follow-up observation, after six months to review the nucleomagnetic and see if there is any change, and if the tumor grows older, it will be possible to deal with it.

Patient questions: Are there no surgeries? Do you normally care or prevent anything?

Director Zhao Tien Ji-ji explained that, in view of the patient ‘ s present condition, there is no surgery, normal and healthy diet, and no special attention is paid to life.

In clinically, the membrane tumor is mostly a benign tumor, growing slowly, but also with the potential for malignity, which tends to grow more rapidly, and is generally sustained, although some grow more rapidly and slowly, some may not grow much in their lifetime, others will grow more slowly, others will grow more quickly, and most are recommended for surgical treatment, such as tumours and neurological or vascular incoherence, or where there is a failure to do so, it may not be possible to remove them once and for all, and a decision on whether, after the surgery, the re-emergence needs to be consolidated, depending on the circumstances; until after the operation, it is determined by the level of the tumor, it is generally rare to repeat a tumour after the first tumour has been removed, and there is a certain possibility of re-emergence after the surgery at the second and third levels.

Clinically, we graded the extent of the brain tumor:

Level 0: refers to the most thorough treatment for the complete removal of tumours, as well as for the erosion of the meningitis, and for the brain tissues within 2 cm of its edge, but the vast majority of brain tumour removal procedures do not meet this requirement;

Level 1: means that both the tumours and the erosion of the hard-dural membrane are removed, that this requirement can be met and that the surgery is effective, that it is possible to do this in general, and that it is often not possible to do so in the case of contours;

Level 2: refers to the removal of a brain tumor, which is eroded by a tumor using a special bipolar electrocondensation, which produces a high-temperature burning of the brain and prevents the recurrence of a brain tumor;

Level 3: Full removal of the body at the moment, and failure to remove or electrocondensate the eroded bone that is attached to or outside the dural;

Level 4: The tumor is only partially excised and there are tumour residues;

Level 5: Merely a tumour biopsy or a decompression procedure, i.e. the removal of a small part of the tumor reduces the tumour ‘ s pressure on the surrounding structure.

Membrane is completely clean and never repeated, and only more clean. Moreover, the extent to which a brain tumor can be cut depends on the surgical skills and experience of doctors. As a result, once a person with a meningitis is required to perform an operation, it is advisable to seek a doctor with experience in the operation, with a relatively high success rate and a relatively low disability rate. However, this does not mean that a well-known and experienced doctor would not be at risk, although the risk of surgery would be relatively low.

Can’t a brain tumor be completely cleaned, and it’ll re-emerge? If there’s any residue, how long will it last?

Theoretically, tumours are residual, and re-emergence is possible. However, the extent to which residual meningitis re-emergence occurs depends on the growth rate of the tumor, with individual variations. For example, some residual tumour cells are active and may grow one year after the operation; others are inactive and may not recur after three or five years or more.

Any more brain tumors?

Membrane is a benign tumor, but it re-emerges, causes symptoms and causes discomfort and even endangers life. As a result, the membrane has re-emergence, and the right method of surgery is to be selected according to its location, size and degree of adhesion to the surrounding tissue. It is often much more difficult to operate again than it was for the first operation, so it must be fully evaluated before doing more. There may also be residual effects from re-surgery, in which case the purpose of the second operation is to minimize the size of the tumour and reduce the tumour residue, followed by after-surgery. The fewer tumours left after the second operation, the less radiation the patient will receive at the time of release, the smaller the damage to normal brain cells, and the smaller the side effects of the treatment.

As to the usefulness of treatment after the first operation, there are studies that divide the patients into two groups, one group after the operation, one group without treatment, and then observations of the time of reoccurrence. Finally, patients who had undergone post-operative treatment were found to have had their relapses at a significantly later stage, which suggests that post-operative treatments help to prevent recurrences.

However, patients are not recommended for routine after the first operation, but only those who have specific tumour residuals after the operation are regularly observed when there are signs of a recurrence. If there are no signs of re-emergence of residual tumour cells in post-operative periodic observations, then there will be no decomposition until the residual tumour cells are active.