If only we could do a biopsy and take a specimen from the mass for examination, these problems wouldn't exist.
Of course, the risk is tremendous.
From all current indications, that mass is likely a lesion in the intestine.
Performing a biopsy, wouldn't that just puncture the intestine?
At this moment, Li Jingsheng suddenly thought of a possibility. Since it's a rare disease, why hadn't he considered intussusception?
Intussusception is relatively rare among clinical abdominal pain diseases.
The symptoms of this patient have many similarities with intussusception, especially that mass.
Soft, movable, light—these all match some clinical symptoms of intussusception.
The more Li Jingsheng thought about it, the more he felt this possibility was high.
After intussusception, because the intestine is active, torsion can easily occur.
This explains well why the patient's severe pain is around the navel rather than at the location of the mass in the lower abdomen.
