In the 1950s, medical experts in Japan discovered a new cerebrovascular disease, smog disease. It has been 60 to 70 years since the discovery of smog, and there are now more mature treatment options for smog, from conservative medication in the early stages to simple drilling surgery in the later stages, and then to the more mature and complete combined vascular bypass surgery today. How is smoker’s disease treated? When it comes to the treatment of the disease, the treatment method that many people may think of is medicine and injection. Most people are still relatively conservative and are not willing to undergo surgical treatment as a last resort, believing that there will be damage or side effects from open surgery after all. For example, some patients often ask if they can take clopidogrel for smog. In fact, for the treatment of smog, there is a consensus among medical experts that conservative medical treatment is generally of little significance, whether it is taking aspirin or clopidogrel or any other drugs, the process of smog cannot be reversed, nor can the morphology of the cerebral blood vessels of smog patients be changed. These medical treatments can only provide some temporary relief of the symptoms of cerebral ischemia, but have no fundamental therapeutic significance. It is generally believed that smog should be treated by surgery. The choice of surgical treatment for smog is also very important, as the traditional direct bypass or patching surgery has some limitations and shortcomings, such as the limited improvement of blood supply by direct bypass, and the longer period of time required for patching surgery to produce results and new blood vessels, during which there is still a risk of stroke. risk, so these two are not yet particularly ideal treatment modalities. Our team is currently working extensively on a more scientific and comprehensive procedure – combined vascular bypass surgery. This is a combination procedure, in which direct bypass and patching are done together in the same surgery, to reestablish systematic cerebral blood flow channels and greatly improve cerebral blood supply, which can achieve better clinical results.