Do you need surgery for the brain tumor? Is the risk high? Can it be cured?

On-line workstation for Director Zhao Tian Ji-ji with a patient’s message: “As a result of his headache, he went to the local hospital for a CT examination, he had a suspected cerebral tumor, and then he had an MRI examination, which confirmed his diagnosis as a cerebral tumor. Does it have to be an operation? Is the surgery difficult? Will it heal?”

Zhao Tian Ji-ji described the information provided by the patient that there was indeed a plagiarosis in the front skull and that it was more likely to be considered for meningitis, but that there was also a need for a nucleo-magnetic and enhanced examination of the tumours and the surrounding anatomical structure, as well as the neural relationship, and that the tumours were benign tumours, which should not be minor from the point of view of the difficulty of surgery, since the tumours of the patient were still large and the oedema surrounding the tumours were high and recommended for treatment.

Choose the best course of operation to reduce the risk of surgery

With regard to treatment of intracranial tumours, especially complex intracircle tumours, the best way to enter is to choose the best possible way of doing so, while maintaining the normal neurological function of the patient is the key point for reducing the risk of the operation. The Group of Experts of the Director General Zhao Tian Jiji of the Centre for Cerebral Oncology has taken the lead in a number of difficult and complex cranial entry operations in the north-west region, such as the use of aluminum to remove large tectonic tumours or sponge tumours, Kawase to remove dysentery dysentery tumours, dysentery tumours before dysentery dysentery dysentery dysentery dysentery dysentery tumours, far-off dysentery dysenterysentery dysentery dystomas, dystomas and cystal cystomas. In the north-west region, the first “high-flow intra-cranial hysterectomy” was carried out with the help of acoustic hysterectomy.

It should be recalled that skull tumours, especially for complex brain tumours, are more difficult to operate, and not all brain surgeons have absolute certainty, which is why patients reflect “the same disease, some doctors consider the risk high and others the risk very low”, and the choice of competent medical institutions and experts is the key to treatment.