Now with the development of medicine, when the operation can be performed so carefully that no traces of the intervention remain, the trend is operations without incisions (endoscopic), operations during which the surgeon penetrates so deeply into the patient’s tissue as if it were rubber-plastic and no less elastic than the hands of a surgeon, and all sorts of scalpels, clamps, tweezers and other medical instruments seem to be childish ignorance of the subject. I think few people remember this situation, since there was once a dashing epic, like the Saruman doctor cutting out tonsils without anesthesia, but let's get back to the real topic. That is, this is still a reality now and in many cases only surgery without any incisions can cure serious illnesses or even save a person’s life. This is very unusual for me, and I decided to delve a little deeper into studying this issue.
Let me start with the fact that, as a rule, such operations are preferable in large medical institutions, or at least in cases where there are highly qualified specialists nearby. And this is correct, because in inexperienced hands the technique can be very crude, there is no chance of harming more than it can cure, and surgery itself will become a controversial activity. Well, let's start talking directly about that very Prüvv operation.
Without going into the details of medical matters, I only know that its goal is to remove the affected organ from the body surgically, all this is done without a surgical incision. If I tell you now in an accessible language, then only a few operations can be performed without incisions, for example, appendectomy (removal of the appendix), purulent operations for peritonitis, removal of intra-articular fractures, cutting of vessels for aneurysms, etc. I have listed some small points for you, then you need to be a doctor. But what is most remarkable to me and what is often not taken into account is that throughout this entire surgical walk, the doctors do not get lost in