Smoker’s disease is a relatively rare cerebrovascular disease caused by narrowing or occlusion of the major arteries of the brain, followed by abnormal changes in the vascular network at the base of the brain, forming tiny and fragile smoke-like vessels. The early symptoms of smog disease are mainly dizziness, lightheadedness, nausea and weakness of limbs. As the disease further progresses, patients will successively develop symptoms of aphasia, hemiparesis and mental decline, and when the disease progresses to a serious condition, it will trigger the danger of cerebral hemorrhage and cerebral infarction. Therefore, we must pay attention to smog disease as early as possible. How can people with smog feel dizzy all the time? People with smog often feel dizzy mainly because the blood flow channels in the skull are blocked, leading to transient cerebral ischemia, for which, as long as sufficient blood flow is provided to the brain locally, the dizziness of smog patients will be greatly improved. So, what can be done to improve the blood flow to the brain from the blocked blood channels in the skull? Effective treatment for smog is a topic of concern for many experts and patients in recent years, as the incidence of the disease is not high worldwide and the relative treatment options are very limited. In order to help smog patients recover and get rid of the pain as soon as possible, our team of medical experts, after years of exploration and research, introduced the Japanese advanced “combined vascular bypass surgery” into China, and after repeated clinical practice in China, improved and enhanced this technology to form an advanced and effective complex surgery in China. After the operation, the patient’s dizziness and weakness of the limbs can be significantly improved, which has opened a new door for the treatment of smog disease.