The neurotic patient went to Sian to see Director Zhao Tian Ji-ji for surgery and retained his facial nerve function.

“The hearing of a neuromaemia was detected two months ago from the University of Lanzhou at the Second College, where the limited capacity of the local hospital led to the well-known Director of Medicine Zhao Tian Jiji, who came to Dondu Hospital. When he met Director Zhao, he finally laid his heart on the ground, and when he saw the film, he advised me to operate and ordered me to perform a pre-operative examination, which was completed and the chief Zhao Tianji had performed the operation. The operation was very successful, the body recovered quickly after the operation, he was released from bed on the third day of the operation, he ate himself, except for a headache in his head, and everything was fine. I was worried that none of the crooked, blinded or bruises had taken place. Thank you, Director Zhao Tian Ji-ji, who was a great doctor, for saying that he was my second-born parent. Before the surgery, the family said that the surgeon in mind had to be careful, and after careful consideration, we chose Director Zhao Tin Ji-ji, who was very important to the doctor, and again thank Director Zhao!”

Neural tumors are the most common benign tumours in the small brain corner of the bridge, accounting for between 80 and 90 per cent of the tumours. Neural tumours account for 10 per cent of tumours within the skull, with a prevalence rate of approximately 1 100,000. In clinical terms, the main symptoms of hearing aneurysm are hearing neurosis, loss of hearing, ear ringing, etc., which requires identification with normal ear disease. According to statistics, 57 per cent of patients with hearing neuromas have an ear ringing, hearing impairment or ear symptoms; 26 per cent have sudden deafness. Therefore, when hearing abnormality occurs, the possibility of hearing a nervous tumor must not be overlooked.

In addition to ear symptoms, patients with hearing neuromagnosis may suffer from a sense of instability and balance, in the form of dizziness, nausea and vomiting, as well as eccentric irritation such as pale and sweaty.

Listening to neuromas as benign tumours, most patients do not have serious consequences if they are treated in a timely manner. The treatment of neuromas is based on surgical treatment, and clinical patients ask, “Can we not? Is surgery dangerous?

What needs to be reminded of is that surgery is the only effective way to treat a nervous tumor. Clinically, in the absence of apparent surgical taboos, patients are generally advised to perform early surgery to avoid a loss of hearing that is difficult to recover! Therefore, it is important that patients do not resist surgery, which is in the interest of maintaining hearing. Addressing the problem of surgical trauma and the risks of surgery that patients’ friends are worried about, in fact, with the development of medical imaging, microneurological surgery, and cranial neuropsytic monitoring, which, in addition to increasing the rate of expediency, has led to an increased focus on the preservation of the neurological function and the maintenance of the quality of life after surgery, especially the protection of the facial neurons, is an important factor to be considered first and foremost by cranial surgeons and most patients in their choice of treatment.

With the development of neurological physiology and microcircle neuromonitoring techniques, the entire hearing procedure can be performed under facial neurons. The operational proficiency of a subcircle surgeon in the separation of tumours and facial neurons can also have an impact on the post-operative neurological function of the patient. In order to avoid further damage to the facial neurons, the following should be achieved: 1; sharp separation; 2 tumours and not facial neurons; 3 , do not over-trasperate neurological neurons; 4 , protect the blood supply around the facial neurons; 5 , avoid thermal damage from electrocondension.