The whole place was silent again.
Doctor Ma blinked: Now everyone followed him and actively sought to be scolded.
How stupid these people were, they watched his training process and didn't understand anything.
The fact is: never ask the imperial envoy for advice!
The imperial envoy is not a teacher who guides you, but a person who specifically checks your wrong test questions.
Taking this case as an example, as long as you know a little about Chinese medicine, you will know that acute appendicitis is called intestinal abscess in traditional Chinese medicine, and the six-channel dialectics is usually not used for diagnosis.
The most magical indication of Six-Channel Dialectics is its use on critically ill patients and patients with difficult and complicated diseases. This is why the academic status of Treatise on Febrile Diseases is so high. Dr. Wen's superb clinical skills prove that the Six-Jing Dialectics not only guides traditional Chinese medicine, but also has practical significance for reference in Western medicine.
This patient was not a previous patient with a difficult or critical illness, and the diagnosis was very clear.
The patient had lacunar infarctions and other conditions such as diabetes and hypertension, however, these diseases in this case all showed stable values that can be described as chronic diseases.
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In summary, there is only one problem that needs to be solved for this patient at this stage: acute appendicitis.
There is no specific medicine in traditional Chinese medicine to treat acute appendicitis.
Acupuncture is not a magical technique and cannot cure all diseases.
Besides, you don’t even understand Chinese medicine diagnosis, and you’re discussing treatment with a Chinese doctor?
Acupuncture is just one method of treatment in Traditional Chinese Medicine, which includes many different treatment methods. When Chinese doctors hold case discussions, they discuss the pros and cons of various treatment methods. It’s not like only Western medicine doctors have a variety of methods.
When it comes to the treatment of acute appendicitis, the consensus of the entire medical community is clearly written in various textbooks: Western medicine surgical treatment is the first choice.
To put it bluntly, the medical technical point of this disease is how to perform surgery.
Chinese doctors like Dr. Wen understand the technical points of this disease, so they don't say a word when discussing the case.
The bigger the boss and the broader his knowledge, the more cautious he should be when speaking. Don't talk nonsense about technical points that you are not good at. The more you talk, the more it will show your lack of professional knowledge.
In contrast, the medical students who asked the questions not only had insufficient accumulation of medical knowledge.
(This is actually forgivable, after all, young people are in the stage of learning knowledge.)
The most important problem is that this group of people obviously have low emotional intelligence.
What does it mean that the boss himself does not speak out? These medical students didn't even read it. He thought he could make things difficult for the big boss, but ended up humiliating himself.
Those who lower their heads all want to slap themselves on the head so that their IQ can be restored quickly: I am so stupid.
The second general surgery department was baptized all over the place, while the people in the hepatobiliary surgery department were trembling on duty.
Just as I was wondering if the imperial envoy had arrived, I heard the door of the department creak open and someone came in.
The doctor on duty almost jumped up, until he saw clearly that the person who came in was his leader, and asked in surprise: "Doctor Tao, you didn't leave?"
When Tao Zhijie heard this, he realized that his junior sister did not come, so he wondered what was going on.
The person who inquired reported, "He said he was called over by the Internal Medicine Department to help."
Bad luck always befalls newcomers, and this was particularly evident when applied to Dr. Zhang Desheng tonight. Doctor Zhang Desheng wanted to cry. Why was it that on the first night of hospitalization, he had constant alarm calls, but Xie didn't get any?
Xie, are you a newcomer or an old one?
He had just left the ICU and was about to start patrolling the ward with great ambition when, with a beep, the phone rang.
The Nephrology Department called the Chief Resident of the Internal Medicine Department, and Dr. Zhang rushed to the Nephrology Department.
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