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Now reading: Chapter 598: 254 Pharmacology and Attribution to Meridians, from My Medical Skills Give Me Experience Points, a Romance novel by My Medical Skills Give Me Experience Points.

Chapter 598: Chapter 254 Pharmacology and Attribution to ridians, Patient with Persistent Upper Abdominal Colic

In addition to the successful treatnt and discharge of one patient, the stomach cancer patient has also been discharged. However, he still needs to co to the hospital regularly for chemotherapy and follow-ups.

The female lawyer suffering from liver cirrhosis saw a significant improvent after surgical treatnt and was discharged three days ago.

However, liver cirrhosis is a common chronic progressive liver disease clinically, caused by diffuse liver damage ford by one or several etiologies acting over a long term or repeatedly.

This damage is often irreversible.

The liver and kidneys share a great similarity in this respect.

Once damaged, it is difficult to fully recover.

The best approach is early detection and treatnt.

Nevertheless, compared to the kidneys, the liver has a strong regenerative capacity. If the liver tissue is in good condition, even 80% removal can be regrown.

The regenerative ability of a liver cirrhosis patient’s liver is definitely affected due to entering the compensated stage of the disease, far from that of a normal liver.

If it progresses to the late stage of liver cirrhosis, or decompensated stage, at that point the liver is essentially worthless.

Not to ntion removing a part of the liver, even undergoing other surgeries requires consideration of whether the patient’s body can withstand it.

The female lawyer in bed 79 is fortunate in her misfortune; her liver cirrhosis is still in its early stages. After finding the real cause and undergoing surgery, the hidden dangers were eliminated.

In the future, she will only need long-term dication to protect her liver, with her life barely impacted.

Speaking of which, Zhou Can earned a reward of 100 Experience Points in pharmacological differentiation when he prescribed the discharge order for this female patient!

This was also his first ti prescribing a discharge order for a liver disease patient.

His pharmacological differentiation skill has now successfully advanced to Level 4, with current Experience Points at 227/10000, ranking as a lower-level attending physician.

He may not be impressive compared to higher ranks, but he is more than sufficient compared to those below him.

Not just among trainees, but even among resident doctors, he definitely stands out.

All doctors know that pathology diagnosis and pharmacological differentiation are the two hardest dical skills to improve in, comparable to advancing in anesthesia technique. Many doctors spend their whole life studying dicine but remain at the attending level.

It’s not just because academic papers have blocked their path to becoming an associate chief physician, but indeed because many doctors, due to limited comprehension or becoming more relaxed and lazy at work, are unwilling to study and research as hard as they did during their student years.

Ultimately, they retire without grasping higher levels of pathology diagnosis and pharmacological differentiation.

In traditional Chinese dicine, besides pharmacological differentiation, there is an even more difficult dical skill called drug effect channeling.

It’s equivalent to an advanced level of prescribing.

Even if you learn pharmacological differentiation, you can only treat according to the disease, knowing what dicine to use for which illness, with precise control over compatibility, dosage, and administration.

But compared to real TCM experts or Internal dicine big shots, there is still a distinct gap.

Because they all understand the skill of drug effect channeling.

Also abbreviated as channeling.

For example, Director Tan of Internal dicine, who has studied the theory of traditional Chinese dicine, is said to have taken many old TCM practitioners as teachers, aiming to deeply study the drug effect channeling.

He beca an Academician and firmly occupies the leading position of Internal dicine because of his real capabilities, not just a reputation.

Director Tan’s achievents in the field of Internal dicine are notable among national experts.

It’s just that he is low-profile and does not seek fa, which is why he is not as well-known as Wu Baihe.

Even Director Yin Hua of the Neurology Departnt is more famous than Director Tan.

Yet, in front of Director Tan, Director Yin Hua acts as respectful as a student.

Like Director Tan, there are many who delved into traditional Chinese dicine after achieving a certain level in dicine. Almost every famous Internal dicine scholar has taken this path, just as all well-known scientists have eventually turned towards theology.

Newton, Einstein, Edison…these great minds turned from scientific research to theology in their later years. No one can explain why.

The guess is that they knew too much, realized many things couldn’t be explained by science, and thus started to believe in the existence of a deity.

Following this logic, when Internal dicine physicians in China achieve a certain level of success and start to study and explore traditional Chinese dicine, it’s likely they also discover many dical phenona that cannot be explained by Western dical theories.

Instead, answers can be found within TCM theory.

Thus, they naturally begin to explore traditional Chinese dicine.

Even though Western dicine has developed rapidly in pharmacology and Western drugs firmly dominate the market as the mainstream,

when it cos to channeling, the Westerners are completely baffled, shaking their heads like bobbleheads, only able to utter “NO, NO.”

Because in Western dicine, there is simply no concept of ridians or acupoints.

They don’t understand ridians at all; when you talk to them about drug effect channeling, it’s like casting pearls before swine.

Zhou Can’s pharmacological differentiation is currently at Level 4, taking his understanding of pharmacology to a new level, but compared to dical magnates like Director Tan of Internal dicine, there’s still a long way to go.

Therefore, he’s still quite vague about the concept of drug effect channeling.

However, he is much better off than Westerners; at least he knows so basic knowledge about ridians and acupoints.

Today, as usual, Zhou Can ca early to the ward to check on the patients under his care.

The number of patients assigned to him by Director Shang has increased from seven to eleven. In these seven days, so of his patients have been discharged, and so are newly admitted.

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