"Do as Dr. Wen says." Dr. Xie Wanying made the decision immediately.
The two surgical resident chiefs who came to support made the decision, and no one else had any objection for the time being.
The nurse quickly inhaled and pushed the medicine.
The next step was observation time. The patient's heart rate was somewhat stable, and a group of people immediately took the opportunity to push the patient into the elevator and transfer him to the ICU.
Doctor Wei was waiting for everyone upstairs until his feet were hot and numb. He could guess what was going on when he saw that the elevator hadn't come up yet.
When the elevator door opened, Dr. Wei said, "It was pretty fast. It's really different with Yingying here."
When the rescue work was going on, a group of people were counting down the seconds. In fact, it didn't take long.
Dr. Wei calculated the time for them: excluding running, it might take them five to eight minutes to arrive at the scene and save lives.
Being able to save a life within five minutes is kingly speed in emergency situations.
...
...
Fast means the rescue process is going smoothly? Doctor Wei thought.
Doctor Zhang Desheng: I don’t understand what’s going on.
Logically speaking, as an ICU doctor, he should be the one who knows the most about how to use Western medicine.
Hearing the patient arrive, the ICU medical staff ran out to pick up the patient. Doctor Du, who was on duty at the ICU tonight, asked about the patient's rescue process.
"I pushed furosemide." said Dr. Zhang Desheng.
"Only recommend furosemide?" Doctor Du was surprised. The fact that one bottle of furosemide could have such miraculous effects showed that the doctor who instructed the use of furosemide was very talented.
In response, Dr. Zhang whispered in Dr. Du's ear: It was the Chinese doctor's suggestion, and it was the Chinese doctor who was amazing, not me.
It's strange. Chinese doctors don't use Chinese medicine to treat patients but use Western medicine. Do you think this belongs to Chinese medicine or Western medicine?
What Dr. Wen said does not belong to Chinese medicine techniques.
How can the use of furosemide intravenous injection for rescue be considered a traditional Chinese medicine technique? It can only be said that traditional Chinese medicine theory helped Western doctors to sort out their ideas for rescue. Dr. Wen believes that traditional Chinese medicine doctors with dignity will not compete with Western medicine for credit.
Simply put, Chinese medical theory believes that the fight against death is a battle of offense and defense. Wherever death attacks, medical staff can give it a hand.
Western medicine is currently unable to figure out where the god of death has attacked, and the patient's shock problem is entirely possible to be a combination of the three factors speculated by Dr. Xie.
The theory of meridians in traditional Chinese medicine has been discussed before. Doctors Pan and Wei understood it immediately because they had seen Doctor Wen’s consultation with patient Liu Fang last time. They explained it to Doctors Zhang and Du in general terms: “The patient’s condition may have deteriorated from the small intestine meridian to the ** meridian and then to the kidney meridian.”
Fight an offensive and defensive battle with the god of death here at the ** meridian and kidney meridian?
After hearing this, Dr. Zhang and Dr. Du thought it was too mysterious: Will this work?
The problem is that it really works.
Traditional Chinese medicine is mysterious because it cannot be digitized like Western medicine, but the valuable clinical experience accumulated by ancient famous doctors cannot deceive people.
For this reason, the Jueyin disease mentioned earlier belongs to the six-channel dialectical system of Treatise on Febrile Diseases, and the academic status of Treatise on Febrile Diseases needs no further explanation.
The Six-Jing Dialectics summarizes the battle between the patient and the god of death in the most original and practical academic way. When applied to this patient, Dr. Wen judged that it was Shaoyin disease. Shaoyin disease is more serious than Jueyin disease and is the most serious of the Six-Jing.
Dr. Wen did not want to say it clearly because if another Chinese medicine doctor came, he might debate with her for a long time like Professor Wang. Even if there was no objection to classifying it as Shaoyin disease, Shaoyin disease can be further subdivided into real syndrome, false syndrome, and whether there are combined diseases.
Once a patient's condition becomes complicated, academic debates are likely to arise, both in Western medicine and even more so in traditional Chinese medicine.
But since Chinese medicine has not been digitized, how can we judge which Chinese doctor’s dialectic is correct?
For this reason, ordinary people know that Chinese medicine emphasizes the pursuit of famous doctors.
As mentioned earlier, Dr. Fu, Dr. Xie, and Dr. Pan trust Dr. Wen not because of the mysterious TCM theories they heard, but because Dr. Wen is a remarkable person who can apply TCM theories to clinical practice with miraculous results.
Continue read on readnovelmtl.com