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Complications of Surgery and Acupuncture Nasser Tabesh. MD DTCM
All surgery carries some problems. Even the minor surgery carries risk of complications occurring. No surgeons like to see the Ominous Table of Surgical Complications, However, sometimes need to review especially Experts. Usually all surgery involves at least some pain and complications. Good surgical results are expected. But no Surgery comes with an exact guarantee. Private surgery and sever complication. Family surgery and sever complication. Right inguinal hernia and operation on the left inguinal. Wrong-side surgery.
Situs in versus, apparent negative electrocardiography, and right appendectomy incision.

Ominous Table of Surgical Complications
Click To Magnify The Table
Legal; the material presented here is for informational purposes only. It is not meant to be a substitute for physician critical care.
Any surgery that requires anesthesia can be potentially harmful. All surgical anesthesia or sedation involves risk. The body’s ability to heal varies from person to person, different ages at different times. Different people vary in their responses to any given operation; doctors vary in their preferences and experiences. You must evaluate the possible good result of having the operation or procedure against the risk of complications. The only surgeon, who doesn’t experience complications, is the surgeon who doesn’t do much surgery.”Surgeons are trained to deal with the most common complications.
There are many diseases, or physiological dysfunctions, in complications which do not yet amount to a disease, which can be cured by acupuncture and not by western medicine or reoperation. This kind of treatment for complications of surgery is the viewpoint moves backwards in addition, forwards between Traditional Acupuncture and Western medicine.
Disease organs seem to have a lowered threshold of response, for only a small stimulus is needed to correct a dysfunction. For this reason, the acupuncture needle can cure some of lethal complications of surgery and yet is harmless if wrong treatment is effected, as the threshold of response of the healthy organ is beyond the stimulus of a mere acupuncture needle. How to treat an infection through acupuncture? It is important that infections are treated appropriately and unnecessary and injudicious use of antibiotic is avoided. Many of these drugs have side effect and many are often incorrectly prescribed. Natural remedies like acupuncture are also successful in fighting infections moreover, support the immune system, to strengthen the systemic immunity. Western medicine treats symptoms where as TCM treats causes. Acupuncture can alter the body’s functional status, inducing, measurable changes in physical structure of a complicated patient.
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Problems and Management
First choice for complications of surgery is surgical interaction or reoperation and the last treatments, if you cannot do anything, the acupuncture, or both simultaneously. Like an abscess formation under diaphragm and empyema, high fever, first treatment is drain collection, then tube thoracostomy and second, needling on (large intestinal 4) (lung 5 lung 7) (spleen 21) stomach 36) (Du 14) (stomach 21) ( Ren 17). The Surgeon and a Medical Acupuncture MD are the best-suited and most widely trained person capable of participating in and supervising all aspects of complications of surgery. Surgeons and medical acupuncture make every effort to minimize the problems. Postoperative acupuncture and pre operative acupuncture cause to reduce the unexpected events that may lead to severe complications. Complications may require medical intervention such as additional surgery in rare instances, Complications may lead to death on the operation table. Many of which can be successfully avoided and/or treated.
Possible complications include:
Infection: Infection may occur in the wound or intra abdominal or on to the thorax or boney matrix. Pneumonia is always a risk following major surgery. Disruption of sutured tissue postoperative complications of overweighting and diabetic patients’.
Other surgical and post-surgical problems include coma, surgical shock, blood clots, bleeding, hematoma, gastric perforation in The L-BAND, heart attacks,
Extra systole, necrosis clostridium, purple chocolate seromas, seizures, brain damage, loss of function, loss of sensation, change of sensation, localized paralysis, poor healing, persistent pain, temporary or permanent injury to blood vessels and muscles, partial collapse of the lungs, athlectasia, pneumonia, laryngeal nerve damages parathyroid damages.
Iatrogenic defect Anal incontinence for feces and gas after internal sphencterotomy. The most common catastrophic GI complication after cardiac surgery is mesenteric ischemia, which is frequently fatal. This complication may be a result of athero embolization, heparin-induced thrombocytopenia, or hypo perfusion. Gastrointestinal (GI) complications after heart operation are rare but carry significant morbidity and mortality even when recognized early and treated appropriately.
Intra-abdominal Event intra-abdominal event after heart operation.
Predictors of Death After Cardiopulmonary bypass has been implicated in causing mesenteric ischemia by effecting regional differences in intestinal blood flow.
Be honest and review Ominous Table of complications of surgery, before you face with it.
Vancouver British Columbia, CANADA
References
- Smith s, Freelsnd M, Heflers et al the next ten years of health spending
- Schwartzs principles of surgery complications of surgery
- Essential Surgery problems and management H.George Burkitt Clive R.G.Quick Philip J.Deakin Churchill Livingstone
- Complications of Surgery Schwartz s Principles of Surgery.
- An Introduction To Acupancture and how it works subhuti Dhamananda Ph.D.
- The Ancient chinese Art of Healing Felix Mann.
- ESSential Surgery H.George Burkitt clive R.G Quick Dennis Gatt.
- Fundamentals of Chinese Acupuncture Andrew Ellis.Nigelwiseman Ken Boss.
- Chinese Acupuncture and Moxibustion Qui Mao-Liangmd professor of nanjing college of TCM-Zang Shan-chen MD professor of shandong college of TCM-Zhou Xing-Xiao MD-Gao Zhen-Wu MD-YU Zhang-quan MD professor at chengdu college of TCM

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