Chapter 588 Nothing



There are many factors that lead to premature birth. The worst thing is that medicine can never predict all premature births, nor can it figure out all the causes of premature births.

This is to say that a large proportion of premature births in clinical practice are premature births of unknown causes. Even if doctors make medical speculations afterwards, whether the cause is 100% correct cannot be determined, and the only way to make a medical diagnosis is to put a diagnostic question mark.

What doctors can do is, like Dr. Tong did when he answered the phone before, to ask a few questions. If they can answer the question, that's fine. If not, that's fine too.

The most important thing is what a large group of doctors are doing now, they hurry up and save lives, they don't care about anything else, they just use whatever means possible, and they don't care about the reasons.

This situation is a bit like rescuing a patient with unexplained cardiac arrest. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation comes first, and other things should not be considered for the time being.

Maternal rescue is like cardiopulmonary resuscitation, which requires a countdown.

Dr. Xie had actually experienced this earlier when she was interning in obstetrics.

The reason for the countdown is that the fetus has a time limit in the mother's body. If it does not come out within a certain period of time, both the fetus and the mother will die. This is the correct interpretation of one corpse and two lives.

The above question can be answered here: it may be too late to wait for the ambulance to arrive. Especially for a patient like this, the time when the amniotic fluid breaks may exceed the doctors' expectations.

...

...

There was someone waiting at the patient's door. It was the husband of the woman in labor.

"How does your wife feel now?" Doctor Tong took two steps forward to meet the family and asked, "When did she feel her water broke?"

"She herself couldn't explain it clearly. At first she felt like she had to pee. Later my mother went to check and said it wasn't her." The husband of the woman in labor said these two sentences very angrily. He might have been angry that his wife realized too late that she was about to give birth.

The mother seems to be a first-time mother with no experience in childbirth, so it is normal for her to have misunderstandings about her physical condition.

Dr. Tong patted the family member on the shoulder and signaled to him that from now on he should not speak to the patient like that.

Think about it, your wife is on the verge of life and death in order to give birth to a child for you and her, how can you complain about her? Even if she is negligent in some way, it cannot be said to be her fault.

Dr. Tong's prestige as a village doctor is demonstrated here.

The patient's husband didn't dare to say anything else. He saw that except for Dr. Tong, all the other doctors who came with Dr. Tong were staring at him with eyes as sharp as knives.

It’s not wrong to complain about troubles, but you have to do it according to the situation. The doctor reminded the family to avoid being gossiped about by others.

After receiving the latest patient information, the doctors could feel that the situation was becoming more and more difficult. The mother did not know when her water would break, which might delay the delivery, and the fetus might die of lack of oxygen in an environment without amniotic fluid.

How long a fetus that has lost its amniotic fluid can survive depends on the individual case, but it is definitely better to give birth as soon as possible after the amniotic fluid breaks. This is because it takes about ten hours for the mother's amniotic fluid to flow out.

Now the woman can’t say for sure whether her water has been broken for more than ten hours.

The village clinic is not a specialized obstetrics and gynecology hospital, does not have the relevant specialized equipment, and generally does not provide intravenous drips.

The doctors knew before departure that a fetal heart monitor was needed to detect the fetal heart rate, but there was no such thing as an electrocardiogram monitor to monitor the mother's heart rate and blood pressure, but there was no such thing.

Nothing?

There was a pair of obstetric forceps, which Dr. Tong had specially sterilized and wrapped in case it was needed.

Dr. Shen Xifei and other doctors from the capital: This condition——

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