Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 628: 264: Unraveling Diagnosis, Misfortune Seeks the from My Medical Skills Give Me Experience Points, a Romance novel by My Medical Skills Give Me Experience Points.

Chapter 628: Chapter 264: Unraveling Diagnosis, Misfortune Seeks the Suffering

After the patient left, Director Zheng stood up and firmly grasped Zhou Can’s hand.

“Dr. Zhou, thank you for coming over to help! Diagnosing this case is very difficult. After the small intestine perfusion test results are out, we will still need your continued assistance in diagnosis.”

Zheng Hongtao treated Zhou Can with such regard because diagnosing this disease heavily relied on Zhou Can.

Moreover, if he could solve a disease that even big hospitals could not cure and successfully treat the patient, it would greatly benefit him.

The authority and reputation of a specialist is built up by diagnosing and treating challenging cases in the relevant fields, as well as publishing high-impact, high-quality papers, bit by bit.

Tall buildings rise from the ground; large trees grow from tiny seeds.

Famous doctors are never made overnight.

Those who beco famous from one or two cases and are called the ‘Divine Doctor’ are usually ‘charlatan divine doctors’. Mostly they are fraudsters, with not a single true ‘Divine Doctor’ among them.

Patients travel thousands of miles, going a great distance to seek treatnt, essentially paying a stupidity tax.

Of course, there may be so genuine ‘Divine Doctors’. They might be traditional Chinese dicine practitioners hidden from the world, without dical licenses, possibly living dissolute lives, or appearing more like charlatans.

But they possess so lost traditional Chinese dical techniques and truly relieve patients of their suffering.

Moreover, there’s a fundantal difference between these divine doctors and the charlatans.

They treat and heal not for money but charge minimal fees, and like ancient Chinese doctors, they may even treat poor patients for free. They bear financial losses to treat patients, only aiming to alleviate the patients’ pain.

Charlatans, on the other hand, are all about sches and scams, like so-called ‘healing through energy’ or claiming that a certain folk redy can cure all diseases, and so on.

Without exception, it’s all about tricking people into paying the stupidity tax.

Even if after their treatnt, patients feel much better, it is rely a psychological effect.

From a dical perspective, those supposed cure-all dicines are without exception fake, re health supplents, specifically designed to swindle people.

From Zhou Can’s professional viewpoint, an effective dicine always has strong toxic side effects.

They can only treat very specific types of diseases, not cure everything.

Such dicines are generally prescription drugs, hard for patients to obtain themselves.

When prescribing dicines, doctors also need to deliberate carefully, considering everything before daring to write a prescription.

After Zhou Can returned to the office from the outpatient clinic, he continued to write case histories, track disease progression, and review dical orders.

As he beca more skilled at independently writing dical orders, he increasingly felt his own experience and knowledge were inadequate. Besides seeking more advice from senior doctors, he thought of several other thods to quickly improve his level of writing dical orders.

He spent every day earnestly reading books, greedily supplenting his basic dical knowledge, which was a given.

Also, he utilized his access to browse through various past treatnt cases in the departnt. He learned from the dical orders written by Director Shang, Director Zheng, Deputy Director Shi, and others, gaining from their experience.

This thod was very effective.

For each case he reviewed, he gained 1 point of Pharmacological differentiation Experience Points and 1 point of Pathological Diagnosis Experience Points.

Truly killing several birds with one stone.

Around six o’clock in the afternoon, the patient with diarrhea and diabetes insipidus completed the small intestine perfusion test, and the family mbers took the results to Director Zheng Hongtao. Then Director Zheng ca to the office with the results to find Zhou Can.

After all, as a director, seeking Zhou Can’s help again and again in front of the family mbers was sowhat embarrassing.

So he sent the family mbers away and ca alone with the test results to find Zhou Can.

Analyzing and diagnosing such complex cases was extrely difficult.

Discussing with Zhou Can wasn’t sothing other doctors would laugh at.

Besides, many doctors ca to Zhou Can for help all the ti.

Now even the young nurses in the departnt were coming to Zhou Can for assistance.

For instance, they needed help with inserting catheters or encountering difficulty finding veins in obese patients and so on.

All ca to Zhou Can for assistance.

The pretty nurses in their twenties called him ‘Brother Can’, and Zhou Can couldn’t turn them down.

Unless he was particularly busy, he would go over and help them.

Earning experience points while gaining their gratitude was sothing he was happy to do.

Especially procedures like catheter insertion or tracheal intubation, he could earn 1 point of Insertion Experience Points for each operation, and sotis he might even get a bonus of 10 points of Insertion Experience Points.

“Dr. Zhou, based on the small intestine perfusion test, it is proven that there is a substantial secretion of water and electrolytes in the patient’s intestines, which allows for a preliminary diagnosis of secretory diarrhea.”

Zheng Hongtao presented him with the test results.

The patient also underwent routine stool tests and bacterial cultures, which ca out negative.

This could exclude the possibility of chronic bacterial enteritis.

The common types of diarrhea are four: secretory diarrhea, osmotic diarrhea, exudative diarrhea, and diarrhea caused by gastrointestinal dysfunction.

Exudative diarrhea is essentially what’s commonly known as inflammatory diarrhea.

For example, enteritis.

Therefore, routine stool tests and bacterial cultures are very significant for diagnosis. The results of the bacterial culture were negative, and now they can directly rule out exudative diarrhea.

The small intestine perfusion test helped them directly identify the patient as having secretory diarrhea.

“The patient’s stool routine indicates that the excretion of potassium, sodium, chloride, and bicarbonate is all severely above the normal values. The highest is even twenty tis the standard level. No wonder the patient couldn’t hold up.”

You are reading My Medical Skills Give Me Experience Points Chapter 628: 264: Unraveling Diagnosis, Misfortune Seeks the 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

MILF Paradise System cover
Trending now

MILF Paradise System

BeingOtaku ·Fantasy

[Warning:MatureContentR-18]LotsofMelons.OnlyNTRNetori-NoNetorare.Alexwasnineteen,acollegestudent,andapparentlytheuniversedecidedtocursehim…withasys...

My Arms Can Turn into Blades cover
Trending now

My Arms Can Turn into Blades

Ode ·Fantasy

ChenLuSifindsastrangestoneandmeetsastrangegirlduringhistombsweeping.Afterthegirlslasheshimwithasword,hefindsthathecouldn'tcontrolhiswholebodybuthis...

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.