“Modern Huahua” – Director of Zhao Tian Ji-ji, Quantified Medical Surgery for hearing neuromagnosis

On-line workstation for Director Zhao Tian Ji, with patients sharing their experience and current situation.

“I have a headache, my son takes me to the hospital, has a nervous tumor in my head, needs surgery, my son has found on the Internet that Director Zhao is doing a good job with the neuromagnosis, and we went to Dondu Hospital to find Director Zhao to perform the surgery, which was very successful.

Chief Zhao gave me the day after the surgery, and I felt more than three months of my face numb, back on my feet, back on my feet, all those months of meds, acupuncture, all kinds of acupunctures, all these months of meds, and he was completely cured by a few hours of surgery.

I walked to the toilet on my own on the third day of the operation, with no help, and with no after-effects, Director Zhao gave me a very good neurological protection in my brain, so I was lucky to have found Director Zhao Zhao Zheng Jiji, who was lucky to see me at first sight.”

The clinical performance of neuromagnosis is complex and its symptoms are not fully consistent and can be weighed, mainly because of the origin of the tumor, growth rate, direction, tumour size, blood supply, and cystic variability.

The initial symptoms of hearing a nervous tumor are one-sided deafness and acoustic ringing, with most cases having an ear ringing, a high frequency sound, which is described as “blowing”, “sitting”, “beeping”, “beeping” etc. The sounds of the ears sometimes change, and for some time they disappear.

The sound can be intermittent or continuous. The atypical symptoms include headaches, sullimentation, dizziness and movement instability. The increase in late-stage tumours can oppress brain stem or cause intracranial stress, and failure to provide timely surgical intervention can threaten the life of the patient. As a result, when patients whose ears and hearing have been reduced come to the hospital, further visual screening is required to exclude the possibility of hearing neuromagnosis if the drug treatment is ineffective.

Follow-up observations can be made for minor hearing neuromas, especially tumours limited to minor and non-symptomatic symptoms. For the majority of patients, surgery is still the only effective treatment, especially for patients with tumours greater than 2.5 cm in diameter, or with brain stem stress or other symptoms.

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.

The main objectives of the treatment of neuromagnosis are to remove tumors, to remove their oppressive effects on brain stem, small brain, and to remove the hydroplasm caused by tumors on the brain. Ideally, the best is a tumour, but the tumour cannot be fully laced with a nervous or vascular bond.