Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 1310 - 517: Zhou Can the Madman, Disaster Triggered from My Medical Skills Give Me Experience Points, a Romance novel by My Medical Skills Give Me Experience Points.

"Sir, the patient you want to visit is in that bed."

The nurse, seeing Zhou Can looking around after entering the ward, thought he was searching for the patient he wanted to visit.

Because patients who co in here all need to have their hair and nails cut clean.

Each one ends up bald, and so patients are even wrapped in bandages like mummies, making them hard to distinguish.

"Oh, okay!"

Zhou Can had already guessed that the bed further away was likely Deputy Director Lu’s. There were several doctors and nurses busy around it, using various rescue asures.

Xiang Fei, renowned as the "Nesis of King Yan," was acting as the chief commander.

He himself was also participating in the high-difficulty rescue work.

"You can only stand by and watch, but be sure not to interfere with the dical staff’s rescue efforts."

The nurse, worried that Zhou Can might cause trouble, gave him a heads-up in advance.

"Understood."

Zhou Can started walking over there.

Since he was wearing a disposable sterile protective suit, the dical staff could imdiately tell he was a family mber visiting the ward.

Everyone had their own work to attend to, so naturally, no one paid him any mind.

Only the nurse accompanying him stayed by his side. Family visits required one-on-one accompanint by dical personnel. In case any family mber accidentally tampered with other patients’ ventilators, blood perfusion machines, dialysis machines, or monitoring instrunts, so actions could cause life-threatening harm to those already fragile patients.

This is one of the reasons why dical staff don’t like family mbers entering the ICU for visits.

Introducing a stranger brings many unknown risks.

Everyone’s work was already busy enough, and having to divert ti and effort to attend to visiting family mbers added to their workload. Naturally, no one was willing to do it.

As Zhou Can approached bed 13, the nurse quickly called him to stop, telling him not to go any further.

On the bed, Deputy Director Lu’s hair had been shaved, revealing a visible head injury hematoma on the back of his head. His whole face appeared very gray and lifeless.

Moreover, his right hand lay by his side at an unnatural angle; from Zhou Can’s diagnostic experience, it was clear that the hand must have a fracture.

His legs also had severe hematomas, and both legs seed to have so degree of fracture.

From these fractures and the hematoma on the back of the head, one could basically deduce the posture when Deputy Director Lu landed.

It should have been that his legs landed first, then his body lost balance, and the enormous impact caused his body to hit the ground. Instinctively, his right hand tried to support him, resulting in a fracture. When he fell, the back of his head struck the hard ground.

But the ground should have been flat, like concrete or similar.

If the ground was rocky, or if the spot where the head struck had a corner, it would easily have caused a direct cut and bleeding.

Only when the impact spot was on a flat surface would such a large area hematoma form.

The bruised blood accumulated under the skin.

After understanding Deputy Director Lu’s fall injury process, Zhou Can felt the hope of rescuing him had increased significantly.

According to anatomical structure, the back of the head is closer to important brain tissue.

Even in fighting or combat, hitting the back of the head and the male perineum are usually prohibited areas. These are vulnerable spots.

A heavy blow to the back of the head can easily cause fainting or even imdiate death.

The injured area on Deputy Director Lu was approximately at the occipital bone.

The parietal bone was also affected.

It can be estimated that the impact force when he fell was substantial.

Whether the legs landed first is really hard to say. Only the person involved knows.

The cerebellum, cerebrum, and even the pineal gland might have been severely impacted and damaged. As for which area inside the skull is bleeding? What kind of bleeding is it? Such issues can’t be determined by the naked eye alone.

The possibility of diffuse bleeding is quite high.

Of course, there is also a chance of intracranial artery rupture, leading to localized or multi-source bleeding.

Zhou Can looked at the monitor’s screen and dials, with alarms ringing constantly, showing that Deputy Director Lu’s blood oxygen, heart rate, blood pressure, respiration, brain waves—all were abnormal.

The situation was far more severe than imagined.

Central venous pressure monitoring had already been done, and a ventilator was in use.

Deputy Director Lu’s problems seed nurous, but if the true cause of coma could be identified, perhaps most issues could be easily resolved. If one focused solely on blood pressure, or respiration, or any single problem of blood oxygen, it would be like being blinded by leaves, lost in a confusing scene.

This is the most common mistake made by doctors at and below the chief level.

Due to limited clinical knowledge application ability, they couldn’t take a comprehensive view during diagnosis, making it very easy to confine their thinking to a very narrow scope.

Xiang Fei, a chief-level figure in the Intensive Care dicine Departnt at the Provincial People’s Hospital, was undoubtedly a top-notch leader.

His diagnostic thinking surely surpassed the chief level.

His clinical experience was incredibly rich.

Currently, his strategy in commanding the rescue was symptom-based treatnt, endeavoring to improve the patient’s blood oxygen saturation, stabilize the patient’s heart rate, increase blood pressure, assist breathing, and so on.

This is also the most commonly used rescue approach in Western dicine clinical practice.

Whichever vital sign was poor, he would assist in correcting it.

In urgent rescue operations for critically ill patients, this was the most effective rescue thod.

If ti allowed, there would be higher-level rescue thods available.

You are reading My Medical Skills Give Me Experience Points Chapter 1310 - 517: Zhou Can the Madman, Disaster Triggered on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.