Is there a cure for smoker’s disease

Smokey’s disease is a rare cerebrovascular disease, due to chronic progressive stenosis or occlusion of the main arteries in the brain, which in turn leads to abnormal proliferation of the vascular network at the base of the skull, forming very thin and fragile smokey blood vessels, and thus is very likely to lead to cerebral infarcts or cerebral hemorrhage, which is very dangerous. So can smog disease be cured? Of course, smog disease can be cured. Although anatomically speaking, no matter what treatment is given, it is usually impossible to restore the anatomical structure of the cerebral blood vessels in patients with smoky brain disease, it is possible to surgically establish exceptional collateral circulation channels to improve the blood supply to the brain and to ensure the normal operation of the brain, and in this sense, smoky brain disease can be said to have been cured. Therefore, it is possible to cure smoky disease. The traditional surgical methods for treating smog disease include direct bypass surgery and patch surgery, but both of these procedures, regardless of which one is performed alone, do not achieve very satisfactory results, and have the disadvantages of limited scope of blood supply improvement and slow onset of action. The combined bypass surgery performed by our team has successfully overcome these shortcomings. Combined vascular bypass surgery can accomplish both direct bypass and patching at the same time, which is a two-pronged approach with better and faster blood supply improvement, which is absolutely beneficial for smokers.