Chapter 297: Great doctor style

Latest website: meeting room.

"Doctor Bailey will send you Katie's medical records, time is running out, everyone."

Dr. Shept told Nazi to put twenty copies of the medical records on the table and let everyone take them: "If you want to save Katie's life, you must hurry up."

After speaking, he left.

Everyone immediately stepped forward, and one took a medical record.

Adam was quick, got it first, and then started reading quickly.

As Dr. Sheppert said, if this operation is performed, it will be an advanced operation, even more advanced than the heart bypass operation Leonard was preparing to take Adam.

Opportunities are rare in a lifetime and extremely rare.

"Meredith, let's cooperate."

Christina is the most ambitious, pulling Meredith in a low voice: "You are Katie’s tube bed doctor. You will take care of her from the beginning. You must know more details. We work together to find the answer first. The chance of surgery is each 50%..."

"I can work with you, but I don't want to have surgery."

Meredith looked disgusted: "You do it."

"Are you kidding me?"

Christina was surprised and delighted, and somewhat incredulous.

This level of surgery, not to mention the interns, even the residents are extremely eye-catching. This can be used by Dr. Sheppert as a temptation and motivation to encourage the exhausted interns to rack their brains.

Meredith is also a surgeon. For such a rare opportunity, he said he gave up and gave up?

"I don't want to have an operation with Shept."

Meredith disgusted.

"What happened to Shept?"

Christina immediately noticed that there was a problem between the two, and looked at Meredith a little strange.

"We found the answer, you come for the operation, do you not do it?"

Meredith didn't have a good air.

"Deal."

Christina was overjoyed, and took Meredith and walked out: "Let's go to the library now."

This kind of intractable disease, how can it be possible without turning the book.

Adam closed the medical record and walked out.

Christina glanced at Adam and ran directly with Meredith.

Among the 20 interns, she originally thought she was the best.

But for Adam, this confidence immediately disappeared.

Now, she wants to catch up.

This once-in-a-lifetime advanced surgery is an important turning point.

And she has mastered it.

Christina, who came to the corner, stopped and turned around abruptly. Adam was standing in front of Dr. Shept. She said with a smile, "Doctor Sheput, I have an idea."

"Comeon, you must be joking with me."

Christina didn't believe that Adam could find the answer so quickly, but there was still an ominous premonition in her heart, but her heels were firmly nailed there, watching the communication between Adam and Dr. Sheputt over there worriedly.

"Tell me."

Dr. Shept had a strange look.

He really didn't expect that someone would come to give him the answer after just confessing the task.

If it's so easy, then what is he?

"As far as the medical records are concerned, we can exclude hypoxia, renal failure, and acidosis. The tomogram is normal, and tumors are basically excluded."

Adam said calmly: "The number of white blood cells is normal, there is no fever, and there is no abnormality in the spinal cord drainage. The infection is basically ruled out."

"I know all this."

Dr. Shept interrupted, "Speak your thoughts."

"I think it might be an aneurysm."

Adam said.

"The tomography scan showed no bleeding, the patient had no headaches, neck pain, no western poison, no pregnancy, and no trauma."

Dr. Sheppert shook his head and said, "So it is not medically proven that she has an aneurysm."

"But she likes to play gymnastics, and the medical record says that she had fallen and sprained."

Adam explained: "A fall may cause an aneurysm to rupture."

"Yes, but the odds are one in a million, and it's still theoretical."

Dr. Sheppert retorted.

"Is the odds of one in a million very small?"

Adam smiled and said, "It’s smaller than zero parts per million? We can’t find the cause of her disease now. If there is no problem in all the checks, then the chance is small, it may happen, and then do a scan to confirm. What does it matter?"

All kinds of examinations in the hospital need to be supported by medical theory.

Without evidence, it is impossible to do all kinds of inspections casually.

Because every inspection must be included in the bill at the end.

This is also to prevent the hospital from arbitrarily arranging inspections and making large sums of money.

Moreover, the cause of the disease cannot be found, and there is no clear direction for inspection. In many cases, even if the inspection is done, it is likely to be ignored because it is too small and not obvious, and it does not work at all.

This is the case with a slight rupture of an aneurysm.

Dr. Shept looked at Adam in a daze.

In Adam, he seemed to see the shadow of someone.

MRI room.

"Damn it."

Dr. Shept took Adam here and performed a scan. When he saw the tiny crack in the display, he blurted out: "The arachnoid hemorrhage is very small, but it is indeed there. She is bleeding in the skull."

Having said this, a smile appeared on his face.

As a top neurosurgeon, he is not afraid of intracranial hemorrhage. A surgical problem is afraid that the cause cannot be found.

"Adam, how did you think of it?"

Dr. Shept looked at Adam, his eyes a little complicated.

"List all possible causes and rule them out one by one."

Adam smiled.

When he got the medical record book, a 3D model of the human body automatically appeared in his mind. The knowledge points of a large number of medical books he had read were constantly simulated, compared and eliminated, and the most likely result was quickly obtained.

"Good job."

Dr. Shept nodded.

Adam's understatement of explanation, the talent and effort required behind it, how could he not know as a top doctor.

"Thank you."

Adam reminded: "What about assisting in the operation?"

"Naturally yours."

Dr. Sheppert combined the medical records and said with a smile: "I'm going to inform Katie's parents now. See you in the operating room for the operation this afternoon."

"See you in the operating room."

Adam was overjoyed.

Shept took a few steps and turned around: "You remind me of someone."

"Who?"

Adam curiously said Sheput smiled, but left without answering.

When he told Katie's parents that he was helpless, Katie's parents threatened to find a doctor again, but that doctor was not so easy to make an appointment.

Regardless of fame or status, that doctor is far better than him, especially good at solving intractable diseases.

Such an amazing doctor, the patient was transferred there, he didn't feel much embarrassment.

Nowadays, most patients will stay in his hands, but it is an intern who solves the problem, which makes him feel very complicated.

I don't know if I should be fortunate to have such an intern under his staff, or would rather the patient be transferred to that great doctor.

He had never seen such a powerful intern.

Maybe that great doctor was like this when he was young.