Chapter 403: Putting Learning into Practice



On the way to the emergency department, Dr. Xie Wanying and Dr. Wen Zihan had a brief internal academic exchange.

The two beautiful doctors have been working together many times and have become more and more skilled in cooperation. Their conversations have become more and more refined, almost turning into magical language, which means that people around them seem to be communicating in an alien language that is difficult to understand.

Everyone knew that Dr. Wen would be the leader of the Acupuncture Department, so the hospital asked her to have a small assistant to learn from her before she actually became the leader.

This little follower will be a young doctor working in the Acupuncture Department of the National Association in the future, and he is learning some skills from Master Wen in advance.

People who are specially arranged to learn from the big guys are generally not simple.

Indeed, this person is also a graduate of the College of Traditional Chinese Medicine who was recruited by the National Association at a high price. He and Dr. Wen Zihan are from the same alma mater and are considered Dr. Wen’s junior fellow student. He admires Dr. Wen very much. His name is Dr. Aojijia.

Dr. Ojijia followed behind Teacher Wen, and the pressure he felt was not from Teacher Wen, but from Teacher Xie, who was obviously not a Chinese medicine student.

The source of pressure that outstanding students fear the most is never the teacher, but the classmates. Based on this, we can know that Dr. Ojijia is definitely an outstanding student. At least he knows much more about Chinese medicine than Dr. Chang Jiawei, Dr. Fu Xinheng and other new Chinese medicine students who think they can learn Chinese medicine well.

Helpless, what kind of competitor has he encountered?

...

...

My cousin, Teacher Xu, mentioned that the characteristic of this strange case is sweating.

Regarding sweat, the Chinese medicine explanation is, Dr. Xie Wanying said: "Sweating is the addition of Yang to Yin."

In ancient Chinese culture, body fluids belong to water and are yin. The body's body fluids are pushed out of the body by the body's yang energy and form sweat, which is used to interpret the meaning of the above ancient Chinese medical saying.

Body fluids are distributed throughout the body and are closely related to all tissues and organs of the body. If you look closely, you will find that this medical theory is similar to Western medicine.

Western medicine's explanation of human sweat tends to be a local view of skin excretions. However, it also conducts in-depth research on the formation mechanism of sweat and finds that it is not entirely a skin problem.

For example, the most common Western medical theory is that sweating is a way for the human body to regulate its own body temperature. We have seen marathon runners sweat a lot during the running process, and when they encounter ultra-low temperature environments, they are more likely to suffer from hypothermia and die. This is an example of this.

Sweating is at least closely related to loss of temperature and fluid, so when a clinician, whether a Chinese or Western doctor, sees a patient sweating profusely, they must immediately make this first judgment, observe the body temperature and whether fluid replacement is needed. This is also common sense for home care patients.

When Dr. Ao heard the first sentence of ancient Chinese medicine uttered by Dr. Xie, he felt it was very strange and a bit unprecedented.

Everyone in the medical circle knows that very few Western doctors are interested in Chinese medicine and are very resistant to it. He has never seen many Western doctors who can recite ancient Chinese medical books. Among the young Western doctors, Dr. Xie, whom he has heard of and met, is the first one.

Traditional Chinese medicine has many classifications of sweat. After being combined with modern medicine, there are so many of them that they are countless, with more and more types added.

I thought Dr. Xie would add his own Western medical perspectives to further categorize Chinese medicine, but he didn’t. The second sentence talks about: “The fluid of the heart.”

The oldest books of traditional Chinese medicine explain that body fluids are driven by the heart, so everything needs to return to the basics. Abnormal sweating in patients can perhaps be inferred from the heart. In traditional Chinese medicine, the diagnosis can be made in combination with the meridian system commonly used in acupuncture.

Dr. Ao found that although he was an excellent student of traditional Chinese medicine, his brain was obviously stuck and he did not have the idea of ​​applying what he learned from reading ancient Chinese medicine books like Dr. Xie.

If Teacher Wen asked him - yes, Dr. Wen Zihan turned around and asked for his opinion.

Doctor Ao: Can I say that I only know that in modern Chinese medicine textbooks, sweating is divided into spontaneous sweating, night sweating, and false sweating... It's embarrassing.

Oh, spontaneous sweating and night sweats are both considered as spontaneous sweating.

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