petersburg at the gene lidze institute of emergency medicine, literally in literally words, barely movingeon, looked at her, he... he was faced with the fact that there is practically no way to do an mri of the spinal cord, it is absolutely clear that the woman is paralyzed, but how- then you need to help a person, even if there is one chance in a million. let's look at this story, we'll go from behind, the cervical spine and the thoracic spine, we'll open the thoracic spine, after that... we'll open it, we'll come out the spinal cord, we'll push the posterior columns apart we will remove this formation from the spinal cord. the operation is complicated, the doctor needs to remove the entire tumor without damaging the spinal cord. in this work, the count is not in millimeters, but in necrons. the operating room is absolutely unique, here is a computed tomograph that works right during the operation. this is necessary in order to control. was it possible to completely preserve the spinal cord? this means that they all pass screws through the lean structure and do not damage the spinal cord