Shenyang, March 28 news (reporter Ma Ying) 58-year-old Gu Tianxiang, director of the Department of Cardiac Surgery of the First Affiliated Hospital of China Medical University, for the first time in his life, inserted an oxygen tube for 6 hours, and operated on patients in the isolation area for the first time.
During surgery (courtesy of China Medical University)
At 3:00 a.m. on March 19, the First Affiliated Hospital of China Medical University received a consultation request from the sister hospital. A patient with acute aortic dissection type A, with pericardial tamponade, is critically ill and life-threatening at any time. This particular patient is a person who has returned to Shenyang in centralized isolation. After a detailed review of the patient and imaging performance, Professor Gu Tianxiang, director of cardiac surgery, made the first judgment: surgery must be performed immediately.
Preoperative testing in the emergency isolation cabin (issued by the Central Broadcasting Network, courtesy of China Medical University)
Patients are in isolation, and surgery and related treatments are facing extremely high risks of epidemic prevention and control. Life first, saving the lives of patients is the first, Vice President Professor Xin Shijie coordinated cardiac surgery, anesthesia, operating room, medical department, hospital office and other departments, launched the emergency surgery plan during the epidemic prevention and control period, formulated detailed patient transport, postoperative treatment and epidemic prevention plan, set up a separate intensive care isolation ward, closed-loop management of the entire transfer and treatment process, and required to ensure the full range of comprehensive disinfection and terminal disinfection.
At 11 a.m., the patient was transferred to the emergency isolation cabin to complete the medical history collection and preoperative laboratory.
The patient was pushed into the isolation operating room (courtesy of China Medical University)
At 2 p.m., the patient entered the isolation operating room. After a 6-hour operation, the patient turned the corner.
Under the shadowless lamp (issued by the Central Broadcasting Network, courtesy of China Medical University)
Protective clothing plus surgical gowns can not open air conditioning, sweat has long been soaked through the back of the clothes (Central Broadcasting Network issued by China Medical University photo)
6 hours of concentration in the negative pressure operating room (courtesy of China Medical University)
After the operation, the patient was transferred to a special intensive care isolation ward, and the patient's vital signs are stable and in recovery.