During Yun Heng's diagnosis and prescription process, Yang Shaohong actually had many questions in her mind, but fortunately she still remembered Yun Heng's instructions and stood by without saying a word.
Although many people now ridicule and mock the so-called experts and professors, and even use words like "bricks" and "beasts" to mock them, to be realistic, most experts and professors still have high IQs and are capable.
It's just that as they learn more, gain more knowledge, and have a higher status, some people are inevitably out of touch with reality. Sometimes they say things like "Why not eat meat porridge?", which makes ordinary people feel uncomfortable.
Some "experts" or "experts" do not think before they speak. They often like to use their own living standards to measure most people, and they always make jokes.
As an associate professor at the Provincial Medical College, Yang Shaohong actually has some quality. Although she had shown distrust of traditional Chinese medicine in the emergency department before, she had always restrained herself from beginning to end and did not behave like a shrew.
In addition, Yun Heng slapped Yang Shaohong in the face with reality in the emergency department. Although Yang Shaohong had many doubts in her heart, she abided by Yun Heng's instructions and did not interrupt.
After the man and the girl left the clinic, Yang Shaohong asked, "Doctor Yun, myasthenia gravis is an autoimmune disease caused by dysfunction of the neuromuscular junction. The ocular myasthenia gravis the girl just now suffered from was caused by trauma. It could be damage to the upper eyelid nerve caused by the trauma, or it could be oculomotor nerve paralysis. The prescription you just prescribed doesn't include any related medications."
Yang Shaohong was watching when Yun Heng was prescribing the medicine just now. The prescription Yun Heng prescribed was mainly for strengthening the spleen and nourishing the liver and kidneys. There was no medicine for the little girl's illness at all.
Yun Heng glanced at Yang Shaohong and continued to call out numbers while replying, "There's no such thing as nerves in Traditional Chinese Medicine. To be precise, the concept of nerves in Traditional Chinese Medicine and your understanding of nerves are two completely different concepts."
Modern medicine was introduced from the West. The original versions of various medical terms or medical concepts are naturally based on English. After translating English into Chinese, the translator did not invent new terms, but applied some Chinese words. This also led to conflicts between the expressions or names of some terms and the original concepts of traditional Chinese medicine.
The most common ones are "heart" and "heart" in traditional Chinese medicine.
However, as these common nouns were translated and used in Chinese for Western purposes, many people have forgotten the original meaning of the words and immediately associate them with Western medicine.
The same goes for nerves. The word "nerve" appeared very early, but it was not used in medicine until modern medicine was introduced. There are no such terms as neurons and nerve lines in traditional Chinese medicine, nor are there any such medical names. Even when they are occasionally mentioned, they are completely different concepts from the nerves in modern medicine.
Yang Shaohong opened her mouth, but when she saw a patient coming in, she quickly closed it and stopped asking.
The patient who came in this time was a woman in her thirties. She was accompanied by her husband, who was supporting the woman when she entered the room.
"sit!"
Yun Heng greeted politely and asked, "Where do you feel uncomfortable?"
The woman said, "I have abdominal pain, nausea, don't want to eat, and have a little diarrhea."
"Come on, put your arms up."
Yun Heng gestured to the woman to put her arm up. While he stretched out his hand to take the patient's pulse, he observed the woman. The woman looked very tired, pale and listless.
"Have you ever had symptoms of dizziness or blacking out before?" Yun Heng asked.
"Yes, yes."
The woman nodded hurriedly: "My blood pressure is a little low, and I've been having dizziness and blacking out since I gave birth."
Yang Shaohong next to her opened her mouth slightly, and couldn't help showing a look of surprise on her face.
The patient just said that he had hiccups, loss of appetite, and abdominal pain recently, but Yun Heng was able to guess that the patient also had symptoms of dizziness and blacking out. This was simply incredible.
Yang Shaohong is not from the clinical department, but she is a professor of medicine after all, and she can still judge some pathological diseases.
If it was a Western medical diagnosis, the patient would have undergone an examination and the doctor would have been able to determine some symptoms by looking at the test results. However, Yang Shaohong was really surprised by Chinese medicine.
Can you tell so many things just by feeling the pulse?
"How is your menstrual flow?" Yun Heng asked again.
The woman said hurriedly, "It's not a big amount."
Yun Heng then released the woman's wrist, looked at her tongue coating again, and began typing on the computer, saying, "Judging from your pulse, your condition is caused by three factors."
"One reason is that I didn't take good care of myself after childbirth, and my vital energy hasn't recovered yet, so I get dizzy and blackout all the time."
"Secondly, there is a deficiency of vital energy, a postnatal imbalance, and unfavorable intake, making it difficult for the spleen and stomach, the source of water and grain essence, to replenish the innate foundation."
"The third is the stomach disease caused by seasonal evil, which leads to abdominal pain, diarrhea, retching and vomiting."
As he spoke, Yun Heng typed the patient's pulse and symptoms on the computer and continued, "The first two are actually caused by poor postpartum care and poor recovery. The third is the hot weather and infection with summer heat."
"Doctor Yun, you are absolutely right."
The woman hurriedly said, "When I gave birth, no one took care of me, and my husband couldn't cook. I couldn't eat or sleep well during that time."
"Um!"
Yun Heng nodded and said, "In your case, we'll treat the seasonal evil first. Once the nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea have subsided, come back for a follow-up visit."
This chapter is not finished yet, please click on the next page to continue reading the exciting content!
Continue read on readnovelmtl.com