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Now reading: Chapter 261: Diagnostic Conclusion from Chinese Medicine: Starting with Daily Intelligence, a Fantasy novel by Hei Tian Tian.

Surgery has its risks.

Especially pediatric surgery.

The risks are even greater.

Therefore, if there’s a way to avoid surgery, it’s best to take it.

The reason Li Xu dared to step forward was simple.

Although he hadn’t received an intelligence prompt, he recalled a case recorded in Elder Cheng’s notes where he had used acupuncture to cure a patient with a pig bone stuck in their throat.

Li Xu thought it was worth a try.

If he succeeded, the child could avoid surgery.

The ergency room fell silent after he spoke.

All the doctors present were stunned.

It was an incredibly arrogant claim!

The patient’s family was even more taken aback, unsure of who to believe.

Dr. Han from the ergency departnt was the first to react. He was about to refuse.

’Is this a joke?’

’Let so young doctor who popped out of nowhere handle such a critical patient?’

’If sothing goes wrong, who’s going to take responsibility?’

’He refused to believe that Chinese dicine possessed so kind of mystical power to remove objects from a distance.’

However, before he could speak, Xue Shuheng unexpectedly agreed!

"Good! Excellent!" Xue Shuheng looked overjoyed as he clapped Li Xu on the shoulder. "I knew you were my best student. Since you’re so confident, I’ll give you this chance to treat her."

’He was ecstatic.’

’Li Xu had just put his own neck in the noose.’

’He couldn’t possibly let go of such a perfect opportunity to humiliate Li Xu in public!’

"However..."

Xue Shuheng’s tone shifted. "You will be responsible for your treatnt. If anything goes wrong, we won’t be covering for you."

He was cutting off Li Xu’s escape route.

"No problem."

Li Xu seed oblivious to the trap he had just walked into.

However, Li Xu’s confidence did not win the family’s trust.

"N-No, you can’t!" The patient’s mother shook her head, crying as she held her daughter tightly. "We... We’ll listen to the expert here. Let’s do the surgery! You’re so young... What if... What if you make my daughter worse?"

She was already scared out of her wits and didn’t dare take any more risks.

Seeing this, Xue Shuheng was secretly delighted, but he put on a troubled expression.

’He knew that if the family didn’t agree, this little show couldn’t go on.’

To ensure Li Xu’s public "humiliation" went smoothly, he decided to give another push.

"Ma’am, please don’t get so worked up," Xue Shuheng coaxed. "This is Doctor Li. Though he’s young, since he’s willing to make such a solemn vow, he must have so confidence. Besides, I’ll be right here watching, personally supervising his treatnt. I guarantee he won’t do anything reckless. If the situation changes in the slightest, we will stop imdiately and proceed with the surgery. What do you think of that?"

He positioned himself as both a "supervisor" and a "failsafe,"

making himself seem magnanimous while also giving the family a dose of reassurance.

The mother hesitated.

She looked at Xue Shuheng, then back at the calm-faced Li Xu.

Finally, caught between her trust in authority and a faint hope for a miracle, she nodded through her tears.

"Alright, then. Doctor... Doctors... you... you have to save my child!"

Just as Li Xu was about to step forward and begin the treatnt, Hu Qiming couldn’t watch any longer.

He rushed forward and forcefully pulled Li Xu aside.

"Li Xu! Are you crazy?!" Hu Qiming lowered his voice, sweating with anxiety. "Can’t you see? That bastard Xue is setting you up! He’s trying to screw you over! Can’t you see how dangerous this patient’s condition is? This isn’t sothing Chinese dicine can solve. Don’t throw away your future just to spite him!"

’He knew Li Xu was a highly skilled doctor,’

’but a critical ergency like a physical throat obstruction...’

’...was, in his opinion, beyond the scope of Chinese dicine.’

A wave of warmth washed over Li Xu as he looked at his anxious friend.

He patted Hu Qiming’s shoulder and said calmly, "Don’t worry. I know what I’m doing."

With that, he turned and walked back to the bedside.

"SIGH!" Hu Qiming watched Li Xu return, stomping his foot in helpless frustration.

He pulled out his phone and started typing in his class group chat, describing the situation.

Hu Qiming: [It’s over... Guys, it’s completely over. Li Xu got into it with that old fox Xue Shuheng and took on an ergency patient with a pig bone stuck in her throat. He made a solemn vow that if he can’t cure her, he’ll take full responsibility! The professor has totally screwed him this ti!]

The ssage instantly sent the group chat into an uproar.

Miaoli: [What?! A bone stuck in the throat? How can you treat that with Chinese dicine? Was Li Xu being impulsive? @Hu Qiming, you have to talk him out of it!]

Jiang Peng: [Holy crap! That Xue Shuheng is such a piece of shit! Isn’t he obviously trying to ruin Li Xu? So insidious!]

Li Baojie: [This is huge trouble. If you mishandle an ergency like this, soone could die! Li Xu is in way too deep this ti...]

Everyone in the group chat was breaking out in a cold sweat for Li Xu.

In their eyes, Li Xu’s actions were no different from an egg smashing against a rock—utterly suicidal.

...

Inside the resuscitation room, Li Xu tuned out all external distractions.

At that mont, the only thing in his eyes was the patient before him, her life hanging by a thread.

Li Xu didn’t rush to act.

Instead, he cald his mind and began a detailed "Four Diagnoses."

First, observation.

The girl’s complexion was a sickly pale, tinged with puffiness. Her lips were cyanotic from lack of oxygen.

Her neck was so swollen it was level with her chest, the skin stretched taut and shiny.

He bent down, leaning close to the patient’s chest.

He could clearly hear her breathing—it was rapid and coarse, accompanied by a "HURGH... HURGH..." rattling sound from phlegm. Every breath was a struggle.

Next, Li Xu carefully questioned the family mber at his side about every detail before and after the girl’s symptoms began.

When he learned that the girl had vomited pale, bloody fluid, his mind began to form a plan.

’This ans the pig bone has already scraped the esophageal mucosa.’

Finally, pulse diagnosis.

He placed his fingers on the girl’s wrist.

The pulse was floating, slippery, rapid, and racing—a classic sign of excessive internal heat evil and the intertwining of phlegm and qi.

He then gently palpated the girl’s swollen head and chest. She imdiately showed an expression of extre pain. This indicated that the local qi and blood were stagnant—where there is no flow, there is pain—and the situation had beco extrely severe.

...

To the side, Xue Shuheng stood with his arms crossed, watching with a cold, detached gaze.

When he saw Li Xu still thodically going through the "observation, listening, inquiry, and palpation," the sneer on his face deepened.

"Hmph, what a showoff!" he couldn’t help but mock. "Look at the ti, and you’re still wasting it. Have you diagnosed anything? Are you going to tell us the patient has caught a common cold and needs a bowl of ginger soup?"

Li Xu ignored his taunts.

He withdrew his hand, stood up straight, and calmly stated his diagnostic conclusion:

"The patient is in critical condition, caused by a ’foreign body obstructing the pharynx, with qi reversal in the upper jiao, complicated by an invasion of wind-cold’!"

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