There was a patient with stomach cancer, and her fate was like a storm. During adjuvant chemotherapy after surgery, the disease quietly returns like a cunning devil. This time, it is no longer a single invasion, but like a wildfire, sowing the seeds of malice throughout the abdominal cavity.
AI assistant creation season Ovaries and intestinal obstruction, which are supposed to be the guardians of life, have now become the territory of stomach cancer. Faced with such a situation, the doctor could only shake his head helplessly, because the chance of a second operation was already slim. However, the patient did not give up, she chose to fight the disease to the end, and despite the difficult road ahead, she remained determined. The doctor also adjusted the ** plan for her, hoping to win her a chance to survive through the new chemotherapy regimen.
After chemotherapy, she was unable to tolerate *** and only received six **. However, the effect of chemotherapy is significant, and the tumor regresses significantly. Although her body looks thin and even skinny, her spirits are still strong.
She still helps her husband with household chores at home and even continues to do his old job with great performance. She had regular follow-up visits every year, and doctors found that her tumor was gradually receding.
Now, 17 years later, she is still living with her illness. Despite being in the advanced stage of stomach cancer, with a regular ** and a good attitude, it is still possible for her to survive for a long time or even**.
Many patients, when they learn that they have a tumor, eagerly ask their doctors how long they can live. However, doctors often tell patients, "Don't ask. For doctors, "how long to live" is just a statistic, but for patients, it means a battle between life and death. The concept of "five-year survival rate" may be too abstract for patients. Statistically, the five-year survival rate refers to the probability that a patient will still be alive for five years after receiving **.
However, for each individual, being alive after five years is 100 percent, and not being alive is 100 percent. The doctor can't be like a fortune teller** how long the patient must live, he can only tell the patient to actively cooperate**, and it is possible to become the object that can be **.
*The quality of the effect needs to be observed slowly in the follow-up review. The doctor knows that one is effective, but for the individual, it can't**. Therefore, doctors cannot tell fortunes to patients. Although statistics are known, they do not mean much to individuals.
Years of anti-cancer experience have taught us that a good attitude, optimism, and happiness are actually immunity. Patients with cancer not only survive, but also live to the fullest. Therefore, how to prescribe a good "psychological prescription" for patients to help them regain their lives disrupted by the disease, and how to let them move from "living" to "living" again and returning to society are issues that we need to focus on.