In the fiber-optic choledochoscope view emerged a tiny forceps-like instrument. Even though there were thousands of doctors watching the livestream, none of them could identify this device.
[Forceps? That's so small. How does the host surgeon plan to operate with it?]
[I'm completely confused. I'm going to watch the video replay a hundred times after the surgery is over.]
[Shut the f*ck up and watch the surgery!]
A few comments expressing their surprise were soon suppressed. This may be a new surgical technique and was likely more advanced than endoscopic transrectal appendectomy.
Perhaps this was the first appearance of a new surgical procedure.
Silence hung in the air as numerous pairs of eyes stared at the operative field, where delicate forceps grasped a white thread, only a few microns thick, with deadly hawk-like accuracy.
It was done without touching the mucosal layer of the common bile duct, which stunned the audience.