The hope of curing hypertension through surgical operation is increasing as the first attempt to reduce and permanently cure a persistently elevated blood pressure was made in Britain recently. All attempts before now seemed to only offer a palliative rather than curative hope for the hypertensive patient. Recently however, a renal surgery was carried out for the first time in Britain which already is yielding a positive result.
The one-hour surgical operation was carried out on one Mr. Anthony Henry and its objective is to attempt to disrupt the signals from the brain that have persistently kept the blood pressure high. Disrupting these signals is hoped to permanently cure the hypertension. The operation which is otherwise known as ‘Renal sympathetic-nerve ablation’ involves inserting a wire into a blood vessel close to the kidneys to burn through the nerves that stimulate high blood pressure.
The patient’s blood pressure is reportedly down only two weeks after the successful surgical operation. The 68 year old retired chef from Stratford already has started to enjoy the benefit this surgical procedure hopes to offer all sufferers of hypertension, and also enjoys the privilege of being the first Briton to undergo this operation.
The benefits of this operation could become apparent within 3 months, and there is the hope that the patient would stop taking anti-hypertensive drugs for life. It is also hoped that this procedure would reduce the blood pressure significantly as well as reduce the stroke mortality by as much as 50%.
In a world where there are millions of people suffering from hypertension this scientific innovation could just be the scientific achievement of the century. We do hope that it truly gives a permanently cure to hypertension and stop the untold hardship patients are suffering in the hands of this seemingly incurable health monster.
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