What we need is not a description of the CT, and to be honest, for experienced doctors like us, you have a rough impression of what your CT will look like at least. Now you are hoping to discuss how to treat it, and a discussion of treatment requires seeing specific imaging details, as well as the patient’s cardiopulmonary function and other tests. Theoretically, a giant pulmonary alveolus should be treated surgically, but the patient actually has multiple pulmonary alveoli in both lungs, which can also be called polycystic lung. So what do the alveoli in the upper lobe of the right lung look like and how numerous are they? How far away are the alveoli in the upper left lobe from this huge alveoli, can they be removed together, and how extensive would the removal be? I am afraid that the remaining lung of the patient is at least emphysema, can such lung function tolerate anesthesia? Will the expansion of the left lower lung exacerbate the emphysema after the removal of the large alveoli? Will there be a significant improvement in lung function after surgery? All of these need to be found out before the surgery, and if a simple alveolar resection does not significantly improve lung function, then it is inoperable or requires a lung transplant. So it’s not as simple as just telling me the CT report. You have to see the CT films, lung function, blood gas analysis values, etc. If there is no basic condition for surgery, only conservative treatment such as oxygen, asthma, anti-infection treatment if necessary, respiratory exercise, Chinese herbal medicine for recuperation, and improvement of living environment are available. As for whether it is conventional open-heart surgery or thoracoscopic surgery, it is just a general technical problem, and the choice should be made according to the actual situation.