Chapter 1055: Chapter 866: Winner in Life Chapter 1055: Chapter 866: Winner in Life Director Fang was so imrsed in the surgery that he had completely lost track of ti.
It was only when Doctor Chen ca in to ask if he should prepare breakfast that Director Fang realized it was already daylight, and ti for breakfast.
By eight o’clock, doctors from other departnts started to arrive at the operating room. Many were curious about the overnight surgery perford by the General Surgery Departnt, which had lasted over six hours, so so ca to inquire. However, as it was a busy ti, not many gathered to join the excitent.
When they learned it was an abdominal organ cluster transplant being perford, everyone couldn’t help but be amazed. They expressed admiration for the General Surgery Departnt, wondering when they had beco capable of performing such a procedure, as they had never heard of Director Fang pulling off such a feat before.
So doctors took a break from their busy schedules to peek into the demonstration room. Although they only watched briefly, they found the surgical skills to be very impressive—quick and well executed, quite professional looking.
Not long after breakfast was ready, another four or five hours had passed, and Doctor Chen ca in again to ask whether to prepare lunch.
Director Fang glanced at the digital clock on the wall, and to his surprise, it was already past noon—it ant the surgery had been going on for ten hours.
Ti was flying indeed; ten hours had passed so quietly.
Perhaps too engrossed and focused, Director Fang hadn’t noticed how swiftly ti had passed.
It wasn’t just Director Fang who didn’t feel the passage of ti; the doctors observing the surgery in the demonstration room didn’t either. They had had a night snack, breakfast, and now it was ti for lunch. The big garbage bin in the demonstration room was now full.
The surgery had now reached the stage of anastomosing the blood vessels of the small intestine and simultaneously the stomach and the small intestine’s vessels, along with the pancreatic duct. Like with the blood vessels, the anastomosis of the pancreatic duct was also very demanding. Poor quality in the anastomosis could lead to obstruction of the pancreatic duct, preventing pancreatic juices from flowing into the small intestine, resulting in digestive dysfunction for the patient.
At this mont, Director Fang didn’t feel hungry at all; he hadn’t even noticed that Yang Ping, who had been operating with him for over ten hours, might be feeling hungry.
Surviving an overnight stint without breakfast or lunch could only be managed by soone with a strong constitution.
To the clear-eyed observer, the situation seed dire, but to those involved, it was puzzling. The patrolling nurse, noting this, suggested that Director Fang take a brief break to eat sothing.
Director Fang looked up at the wall clock again. The operation was at a critical stage, so he decided to keep working without stopping. Organ transplant surgeries benefit from the shortest possible organ ischemia tis, and taking a break would only lengthen that ti.
Having already been hungry for ten hours, another three or four hours would not make a big difference. Completing the anastomosis of the small intestine’s blood supply and the pancreatic duct would soon bring the operation to a conclusion.
“Professor Yang, are you hungry? I don’t feel hungry at all. Why don’t you go get so food? I’ll take it slow,” Director Fang suggested.
Had Yang Ping said he wanted to go eat, Director Fang would have had to join him.
“Let’s just finish the surgery quickly,” Yang Ping replied. For such a major surgery, it was not practical to expect to eat on ti. Everyone’s stomach had undergone special training and could withstand a lot.
At that mont, Director Fang was like a mighty ox, full of energy and vigor. He could easily continue operating for another ten hours.
The main reason was that the surgery was going so smoothly; he had never perford a surgery that went this well before. Overnight, Director Fang felt he had reached the pinnacle of the General Surgery Departnt, an exhilarating sensation akin to being on a stimulant.
When 4 p.m. finally arrived, the surgery concluded after a total of 14 hours. Despite this, Director Fang was reluctant to leave; he even decided to do all the suturing himself, although Yang Ping had no interest in staying to assist him.
In the morning, because other departnts were busy, only a few people stopped by.
In the afternoon, when other departnts were less busy, many doctors ca by, including several prominent directors. They were surprised to hear that the General Surgery Departnt had been performing an abdominal organ cluster transplant overnight.
This was not just any major surgery; nationally, only a handful of top-tier hospitals could perform such operations.
Although the other departnt heads were not very familiar with General Surgery, they knew the basics and were puzzled how Director Fang had suddenly beco so capable of performing such surgeries without any known training. It seed as if he had reached the top overnight.
So inford sources ntioned seeing Director Fang carrying a box of cherries to the Surgical Research Institute several tis, suspecting that he was secretly learning there.
When everyone saw Yang Ping coming out of the operating room, their suspicions were confird. Director Fang must have clung to Yang Ping’s expertise, following in Gao Yuan’s successful footsteps. It appeared that success could indeed be replicated.
Gao Yuan’s achievents were well-known throughout the hospital. His Sports dicine Center had rapidly expanded from the initial 25 beds to 100 beds. In ti, Gao Yuan’s Sports dicine Center was set to rank alongside Beijing’s top three hospitals and Nandu dical University’s Affiliated Hospital No. 1 as a top national departnt.
His Sports dicine Center had also reached the international stage, becoming a sister departnt with the New York Special Surgery Hospital in the United States, a unique distinction nationwide, even surpassing Beijing’s top hospitals’ international collaborations in Sports dicine.
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