©WebNovelPub
Famous Among Top Surgeons in the 90s-Chapter 81 - : Anatomy Anatomy 2
Chapter 81: Anatomy Anatomy 2
The damp cloth covered the organs, and Xie Wanying took a deep breath before she was ready to begin.
In the past, when she was part of a group dissecting a heart together with others, there was not nearly enough time for an individual to explore on their own. Today, she spent the entire day here researching. She felt an excitement that was difficult to suppress, and at the same time, she harbored deep sorrow for the Cadaver Teacher’s death. Therefore, she was determined to properly dissect and identify the evil that caused the Cadaver Teacher’s demise.
With a scalpel in hand, she made cautious, pen-like incisions on the heart.
Compared to males, the operating method of females was obviously different, delicate and gentle.
She opened the right auricle and with gloved hands, she felt the special pectinate muscles inside. This was a crucial area for the study of the importance of anticoagulant therapy in patients with atrial fibrillation.
As the dissection progressed, it became apparent how wondrous the evolutionary journey of the human body was. Even just a heart—all of its parts, its very structure were mythical in nature, something humans could explore but never create.
...
Gradually, the surroundings turned into a cosmos, and Xie Wanying seemed to enter another world where she became oblivious to any sound or object around her. That was at least what Ren Chongda sensed when he walked up to the only female student in the class.
Concentration is one of the reflections of a doctor’s professional qualities and also a benchmark for a medical student to determine whether they can become a doctor. Inability to concentrate can be fatal for a surgeon performing operations. The more focused a doctor can be, the higher achievements they can surely reach in clinical practice and research.
At that moment, Xie Wanying was so engrossed that not even the Instructor Ren’s eyes roaming over her face could distract her.
The other students in the anatomy lab were, however, disturbed. They lifted their heads one after another to look at the Instructor Ren and Xie Wanying standing face to face, with those out of the loop wondering what was going on between them.
“What do you think is wrong with this heart?”
At that moment, Xie Wanying had entered a world stimulated by her Special Ability. Through the touch of her fingers on the heart and the connection with the Special Ability world in her brain, she could clearly see the activity state of the heart when it was still alive.
The voice of Instructor Ren asking the question sounded to her more like a quiz provided by her Special Ability.
After pondering, Xie Wanying answered, “The myocardial wall is thickened, indicating hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, which can be detected by cardiac echography. Clinical features include atrial fibrillation, clinically diagnosed as originating from the atrium. The patient was treated with anticoagulants and sent to internal medicine for catheter treatment, which unfortunately delayed the optimal treatment time. There are significant lesions at the pulmonary vein ostium and the ‘European ridge.’ The right auricle should be excised for occlusion surgery, and the thickened part of the myocardium should be cut, with surgical treatment to the pulmonary vein ostium and ‘European ridge.’ Internal medicine cannot treat a heart that already has complex structural changes.”
Upon hearing her explanation, Ren Chongda immediately turned to look for the deceased’s medical records.
How come the student’s words differed so significantly from the cause of death he had reviewed earlier?
Pulling out the deceased’s medical records and comparing them to the heart regions dissected by Xie Wanying, Ren Chongda checked each detail thoroughly.
The conclusion was that Xie Wanying’s post-mortem findings were more accurate. It could only be said that the clinical doctors’ judgments inherently had an objective blind spot, as they could not see the patient’s internal organs.
Updated from freewёbnoνel.com.
However, to articulate the deceased’s previous symptoms and treatment plans so clearly and accurately through dissection was something even he, Ren Chongda, felt he couldn’t quite achieve.