The ball bag solves the big problem. After trident neuropsychiatrics, she’ll finally be able to eat!

I can eat.

The face is gone.

It’s the happiest thing after the surgery.

The pain in the face is electric.

The pain on the left side of Aunt Ren’s teeth in the position of the temple is as painful as electricity, and she is afraid to eat, for ten seconds at a time, only if she eats at a time when there is no pain, a sign that breaks every day and that she suffers. At first, it was still useful, but it was impossible to stop, it was painful and, over time, it was useless.

The ball bag solves the big problem. After trident neuropsychiatrics, she’ll finally be able to eat!

After an assessment by Prof. Kang Haitao, a team of neurosurgery neurosurgery specialists at the First Hospital of the University of Western Transport, she developed a scylla-pressure procedure.

Trident neuropsychosis is a micro-creative treatment, which involves the operation of a thin needle of about 2 mm in diameter from the skin of the face to the part of the trident nerve out of the skull. – The pebble hole, with a pin piercing, places the ball cylindrical tube into the McKenzie’s cyst, and moderates the trident nerve half-monthly by expanding the cyst, with the aim of quenching the tridental neurotic pain-fibre and retaining to the greatest extent the tactile fibre function, leaving only about 2 mm of puncture in the back of the operation.

One of the most effective complementary treatments for trident neuropsychotic pain, microvascular decompression, currently available, has significant advantages over traditional treatments:

1. Opens an eye-size opening on the side of the mouth, a micro-crop, no skull, no knife.

2: Scylla pressure therapy is less risky, treatment is about 10-20 minutes short and recovery is fast.

You can get out of bed that day.

3. The scylla-pressure therapy is short-lived and patients are treated without severe pain, stress and experience.

4. Low operating costs and short hospitalization time

After consideration, Ms. Ren decided to undergo a scythe-pression procedure, and the post-surgery effects were indeed significant, and the pain at the back of the operation disappeared and was finally fed.