Current location - Plastic Surgery and Aesthetics Network - Plastic surgery and medical aesthetics - Is the word fate still there?
Is the word fate still there?
/kloc-Yan Zi, 0/8 years old, is studying high-speed rail crew. Like all young girls in their youth, she likes idolization, delicious food and ordinary life with her family. She had planned to work part-time this winter vacation to earn some pocket money. However, the plan cannot keep up with the changes.

Yan Zi's pancreatic head grew a huge tumor with a diameter of 4 cm. After visiting major local hospitals, doctors gave almost the same answer: pancreaticoduodenectomy. Duodenal resection is the largest operation in abdominal surgery, which probably involves the resection of six organs and the reconstruction of three digestive tracts. This kind of operation is very traumatic and the quality of life after operation is greatly affected. Mother is firmly opposed to the operation. She doesn't want her daughter, who is only 18 years old, to die in the flower season. However, without surgery, Yan Zi's life will also bear the risk of tumor. The pancreas is a digestive organ, and the pancreatic juice it produces contains various digestive enzymes, which is equivalent to the chemical plant of the human body. Once pancreatic fistula occurs, it will immediately corrode various organs around the pancreas. What's even more frightening is that if vascular corrosion leads to massive bleeding, there may not even be time for rescue. It is simple to make a choice, but the price behind each choice is difficult. Come in or go out? This is a dilemma.