All tumours are operable. It's just that sometimes the operation removes the patient.
>>>>Kennedy.
>>>>
>>>>How did it go from inoperable to operable? Aside from just dropping the "in" of course.
>>>
>>>By finding the surgeon who was capable of doing the job. There are plenty of surgeries that you'd only want to have done by one of the, say, five people in the world who know how to do it right.
>>>
>>>The fact that he went to Duke to have it done, rather than staying in Boston (which has a tremendously good medical community) says that this surgeon is something special.
>>>
>>>Tamar
>>
>>So, it really comes down to that inoperable/operable is based on the doctors experience/skill. It was only inoperable to the first doctor. To the second one, it was ok to operate. I always thought of it as a hard fact, but it's really just an opinion.
>
>Exactly. My dad's second wife, Priscilla, was initially diagnosed with untreatable lung cancer. They found an experimental program in Boston that treated it successfully. She was in remission until the second time got her 10 years later.
I ain't skeert of nuttin eh?
Yikes! What was that?