
Honma hematoma!! Pitcher Yamagami has been diagnosed with Honma hematoma, classified as a serious condition. Is it really Honma hematoma? This rare disease is unique even in the world… confirmed to have occurred in the city at Espa. Dr. Tohru Kizaki (64), who is a medical doctor and the president of the academic association, said on the 29th of last month about the bacterial Honma hematoma caused by the special pathogen that struck pitcher Yamagami, “…” ©Tezuka Productions
Shinichi Honma!!
Is that really true!
God does such things.
There’s no such disease anywhere, huh? lol
I’m sorry, but the text you provided seems to be nonsensical or not meaningful in Japanese. If you have any other text or a specific request, please let me know!
Death penalty!
Tatsuhiko Yamagami… You were a pitcher…
I remember it was a rather terrible story about the truth.
>>8
The artificial heart was so well-made that it was indistinguishable from a real one, right?
>>10
If it’s a disease that mysteriously causes a hematoma, then wouldn’t it be okay to just replace the whole heart?
It has already become an artificial heart (and one that is better than my own).
It turned out that the true nature of the hematoma was a disease that occurs in artificial hearts.
>>13
Honma heart and blood w
When I tried to replace it with an artificial heart, it turned out it was already an artificial heart, right?
Wouldn’t it be cured with a real heart transplant?
So in the end, this ended without a heart transplant, didn’t it?
Does it mean that I couldn’t cure it?
>>15
Even if transplanted, it will likely relapse.
>>15
It’s a hematoma that occurred even with my higher-performance heart.
I gave up thinking that changing it would yield the same result.
After this, I will go to that famous arrogant frame.
>>17
Don’t you think that position is rather presumptuous?
>>17
That wasn’t a story about Honma-sensei dying, was it?
There should have been a recollection of the less famous but presumptuous side.
“Errors is a terrible team name.”
Why “Gaki Deka”?
>>22
Because it’s Akita Shoten.
I thought it might be good to just replace it with a new artificial heart every time a disease occurs, but maybe that’s foolish?
I thought it was a bit presumptuous to cut it here too.
The presumptuous story is that the surgery was perfectly successful, but Dr. Honma died of old age, which is truly a presumptuous story.
Is it because it’s a Champion serialization?
The punchline here is “What was Valentine’s again?”
The last words that BJ hears directly from Dr. Honma during his final moments are “Don’t you think that’s presumptuous?”
In the scene where BJ steps outside after the surgery, the late Honma-sensei, who succumbed to old age, recalls his last words, famously questioning, “Don’t you think it’s presumptuous?”
When I learned the truth about the hematoma, I recalled the scene from earlier and this line came up again.
>>29
I see, I was misunderstanding because of this…
It’s not a disease that occurs in artificial hearts.
A hematoma developed in the heart, and as a measure, Dr. Honma changed it to an artificial heart, but it recurred.
Therefore, I stopped because I believe that even if I exchange it again, the same issue will occur, and it would only be an unnecessary burden.
That’s the flow.
>>31
It’s unclear whether Dr. Honma has changed it or not.
The name of the condition after being brought to Dr. Honma is probably different since it’s called Honma hematoma.
Will a small change in circumstances cause illness due to the malfunction of an artificial heart?
It’s amazing that I’m crying because I’m so regretful.
Who made such an elaborate and amazing artificial heart?
If you’re going to have a major surgery like changing your heart, let me know.
What the heck is this?
>>35
Is it the Soviet Union or Kana?
It seems that there was some amazing person because that world-renowned wild doctor pops up.
When they named it Honma hematoma, they probably realized there was a problem with the artificial heart made in ** country, but they kept quiet about it.
This is going to relapse… Did the patient give up?
>>38
The limits of medicine, huh…!
I stopped.
If a baseball player underwent such surgery, it would be sniffed out, right?
It says “type SR” on the artificial heart.
This was a Soviet-made artificial heart, and during that time, it might have been one of the unique topics of the Cold War era, as it represented technology that was truly unknown and impossible to address in Japan.