Leo blinked once. Yes.
The next morning, Dr. Nurko went against every radiology report. He opened Leo’s skull not where the tumor was, but where Leo had indicated. And there—nestled in a fold of healthy tissue, invisible on every scan—was a tiny, benign cyst. It wasn't the tumor. The tumor was still there. But the cyst was pressing on the vagus nerve, stopping Leo’s breathing reflex. Dr. Nurko removed it in forty-five minutes. dr nurko miracles from heaven
Yes. But yes to what?
The image came up on the screen. The other doctors saw a tangled knot of vessels. Dr. Nurko saw something else—a whisper of a shadow behind the left ventricle. Leo blinked once
In 2019, a flight medevaced a six-day-old baby, Amira, from a rural clinic in Kosovo. She was cyanotic, her tiny body shutting down. The local diagnosis: a complex heart defect, inoperable. "Let her go peacefully," the local doctor had advised. Nurko went against every radiology report
Last year, a woman walked into Dr. Nurko’s clinic. She was old, bent, carrying a faded photograph of a young man in a Yugoslav army uniform.
They called his work "miracles." He called it Tuesday.