Home>News Center>Life
         
 

Doctor eager to do brain surgery to rid drug addiction
(eastday)
Updated: 2005-06-24 08:54

Dr Wang Guisong is eagerly awaiting the chance to perform brain surgery on drug addicts - a practice the Ministry of Health banned last October, but is expected to allow in the future under tight guidelines.


A man walks in front of a light box with Chinese writing that reads 'Severe Damage of Drug' at an anti-drugs exhibition in Shanghai in 2003. [AFP]
Wang, who works in the neurosurgery department at Renji Hospital, is one of the leading experts on the surgery in Shanghai.

"Using medicine alone can solve physical addiction, but it is unable to solve the mental addiction," he said. "Brain surgery is really the last resort for drug addicts and their families. Many broke and distraught parents have come to me for help for their addicted children."

Wang said the brain surgery is not a new technique, but it has only been used in a few countries to treat drug addiction. The method has been used around the world on people with Parkinson's disease, brain tumors and epilepsy.

Several European countries started to perform the surgery on drug addicts in the late 1970s and it became popular in Russia in the 1990s. The surgery was first performed on humans in China in 2000, after testing on animals.

Hospitals in Shaanxi and Guangdong provinces were the first to use the technique.

"We started to do the surgery last year and performed 28 operations. Twenty-three patients kicked drug completely," Wang said. "The rest didn't break their addictions, since they went back to their drug friends."

Wang said narcotics affect certain brain tissues, creating a feeling of euphoria, which can lead to addiction. Destroying a small area of specific brain tissues can break the addiction.

"It is a minimally invasive surgery. Doctors open two small holes in the skull and use two electrodes to destroy the relative tissues," he said. "The most difficult step is to locate the tissues, which is slightly different in different people. It is found through magnetic resonance imaging before the surgery."

While Wang wants to start performing the surgery again, he says he supported the ministry's decision to ban the procedure while setting regulations on how it can be performed.

"Some hospitals performed the surgery incorrectly or didn't have enough qualified doctors," Wang said.

He said the ministry is expected to discuss the surgery with doctors in October, and then announce regulations on how it can be performed.



Demi Moore: conquer aging with baby
Lin Chih-ling injured in horse fall
Jolie adopts Ethiopian AIDS orphan
  Today's Top News     Top Life News
 

Taiwan's KMT Party to elect new leader Saturday

 

   
 

'No trouble brewing,' beer industry insists

 

   
 

Critics see security threat in Unocal bid

 

   
 

DPRK: Nuke-free peninsula our goal

 

   
 

Workplace death toll set to soar in China

 

   
 

No foreign controlling stakes in steel firms

 

   
  A novel without a word telling a love story?
   
  108 Chinese grassroots women in race for Nobel
   
  Mainland celebrities' ID card photos exposed online
   
  An honesty crisis has hit Chinese fledglings
   
  Distorted textbooks applied to Japanese students
   
  Granny grows tired of prostitution at age 63
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  Related Stories  
   
China bans brain surgery to cure drug addicts
   
Brain surgery for drug addicts questioned
  Feature  
  1/3 Chinese youth condone premarital sex  
Advertisement